Try running it each time until the fan kicks in. There's no way I would do a 15 minute warm up. See if that makes a difference. Knock wood my only complaint so far is poor fuel economy. More than enough zoom zoom for me.
Mine sucks fuel also and the exhaust smells like half of it doesn't get burned. I can ride around for 20 minutes with the grandkids and it only goes up a notch or 2. Don't know how accurate that indicator is though. Basically it has only been run in low gear because the fastest I can get up to on my land is about 20 mph. Slow crawling through the firewood trail, some muddy areas in the spring and a pond at the bottom of a hill. Did get it up to 30 mph on the road once but mostly just putting around the yard carrying firewood, loads from the garden, and yard tools I will wait to see what they say and have to give them a couple tries to fix it. Hopefully they find a way to fix it. Is yours an earlier one with the engine built by Subaru?Try running it each time until the fan kicks in. There's no way I would do a 15 minute warm up. See if that makes a difference. Knock wood my only complaint so far is poor fuel economy. More than enough zoom zoom for me.
Yes I have a 2021 with the Subaru engineMine sucks fuel also and the exhaust smells like half of it doesn't get burned. I can ride around for 20 minutes with the grandkids and it only goes up a notch or 2. Don't know how accurate that indicator is though. Basically it has only been run in low gear because the fastest I can get up to on my land is about 20 mph. Slow crawling through the firewood trail, some muddy areas in the spring and a pond at the bottom of a hill. Did get it up to 30 mph on the road once but mostly just putting around the yard carrying firewood, loads from the garden, and yard tools I will wait to see what they say and have to give them a couple tries to fix it. Hopefully they find a way to fix it. Is yours an earlier one with the engine built by Subaru?
the fan helps control coolant temp, but the oil temp is not logged. Oil temp somewhat follows coolant temp, but oil temp often is slower to follow. Sometimes a LOT slower. On my car I log coolant temp oil temp and trans temp. I can get coolant to 200 no problem but oil will be 110-115. takes a while to get it warmed up.The engine never gets hot enough to kick the fan in during the summer. Only time I hear it is in the winter when plowing. No temp gauge so I have no idea of the temp even after sitting there idling to warm up. Total piece of garbage to me if this is the case and no mention in the sales literature or by the dealer there are special operating conditions. Not worth having something that needs the oil changed every 5 hours or just has to sit there and run being an environmental nightmare. Never had a problem like this with a machine before and hopefully in the end I can help others avoid this machine for around the farm use if what you're saying is true. I should find out more next week.
The thing is I could care less about all this crap Kubota is now saying about having to evaporate oil and water from the engine. I have almost $19k in this machine and now all this is coming to life. The epa is worried about a little evaporation from my 5 gallon gas can but doesn't seem to care about how these engines are 1000x worse. Plus Kubota mentions nothing about crap like this upfront. A little thought into the root of the problem could solve most of it. Definitely shows Kubota has zero care for the longevity of these machines. Still waiting for the final conclusion before deciding what to do next because most manufacturers start by making excuses before solving or denying serious issues.the fan helps control coolant temp, but the oil temp is not logged. Oil temp somewhat follows coolant temp, but oil temp often is slower to follow. Sometimes a LOT slower. On my car I log coolant temp oil temp and trans temp. I can get coolant to 200 no problem but oil will be 110-115. takes a while to get it warmed up.
I did and all I am saying is this is excessive compared to my friends machines in the same usage and conditions. So either there is a problem with my machine or problem with Kubotas engineering as their first response was it is normal for the Sidekick to see large quantities of gas and water in the oil in a couple hours. They are fairly new and not many higher hour ones around yet so don't know the long term reliability of the engines yet. Just a fact that future buyers should be aware of before deciding on a machine that I was not aware of or ever had a problem with in the past with all my other machines.I understand your frustration. Re-read Lugbolt's post#39
All IC engines can be susceptible to these issues it isn't just K.
I just spoke to the mechanic working on mine and he said they just got a 2023 in and it's a whole different engine. Different intake manifold, different injectors, completely redesigned intake plus they added a cam sensor and different ecu. Guess they know there's a problem and redesigned everything. Seems early buyers got the shaft. And yes if there's a problem with them the only way to find it is throw parts at it because Kubota offers so little support I am being told.OP here. Sorry for the lack of updates - I have been slammed with work and haven't really had any time to deal with this in the past few months. We're basically just using our quad now and our like new XG-850 just sits parked. I am so upset with this XG850 - we have very low hours on this unit and sold our Mule which was problem free for over a decade!
I am still dealing with my original issue. I already changed out the plugs as suggested and that did not correct the issue - glad that fixed someone else's problem. It will drive but if you get on the gas, it is starved for power will try to backfire. It will pretty much not go any faster than 21mph. It idles perfectly fine and will drive around the yard fine as long as you don't get on the gas.
I don't have a ton of time to throw at this, so it really needs to go back to the dealer if this isn't something I can fix in an hour or two. I also don't have any other injectors or coils here to test with, nor do I want to just throw parts at it with how much parts have gone up.
It feels like a fuel delivery issue, which is why I was initial asking about the fuel pumps, but it could certainly be something with the coils. Open to suggestions.
Sounds like you got a good one back when Subaru was making the engines if you got 400 hours with no problems. Sounds like midyear 2023 models are different and I can't find a explanation why. Surprised the mechanic working on mine. I definitely would avoid this machine after my experience and Kubotas response.how is there not a recall campaign on them if there is a known design flaw. so what do I do? have it fixed and trade it back in? Mine is a 2020 with ~400hrs - it is no longer under warranty. I will have to pay out of pocket for any repairs.
I remember hearing something about K taking over manufacturing the Subaru motors.Sounds like you got a good one back when Subaru was making the engines if you got 400 hours with no problems. Sounds like midyear 2023 models are different and I can't find a explanation why. Surprised the mechanic working on mine. I definitely would avoid this machine after my experience and Kubotas response.
That doesn't make it right. Both of those tie rods should have been recalled, too if it was inside the service life of the part. And yes... if there is a known mechanical defect the manufacturer is dragging its feet on replacing, repairing, or informing about that becomes a safety concern - then yes - recall. A sudden loss of power is certainly a safety concern.recall for a design flaw ??
really ??
heck, my F150 lost BOTH tierod ends(literaly fell off )...NOT deemed to be a safety issue, so no 'recall notice'....
I won't disagree with em being subpar, but we also have to understand that they had to pass government emissions testing. IF they were running pig rich to the point where they're always fouling spark plugs and such, they wouldn't have passed testing. That doesn't mean that they aren't having issues later on out in the field, but what are those issues? I'm out of the kubota dealer loop but I'm sure interested in what's going on with these things.Let me throw my 2 cents in. I have a sidekick that cuts out at 22 to 30 MPH. It's been months and I finally talked to a service manager at Messicks in PA. So I tell him what my symptoms are and without hesitating he says they are JUNK! Hide goes on to say people are spending up to 6k to try to solve this and nothing works. He said to go a range hotter on the spark plugs and that the injectors are spraying too much fuel and diluting the oil in some cases the new spark plugs will fix it. He also said that the covid excuse for why they have no new units on the lot is a lie. Kubota has a bad motor problem because they are junk Subaru motors. Ill let you know if the plugs do any good.
Funny thing is you can smell the unburnt fuel in the exhaust of mine all the time, not just when starting cold. I doubt it would pass an emissions test. The mechanic mentioned it could be a bad ecu but Kubota won't approve the almost $2k replacement. Maybe I'll check with the epa to see if they would check it per Kubotas filing if Kubota doesn't fix it.I won't disagree with em being subpar, but we also have to understand that they had to pass government emissions testing. IF they were running pig rich to the point where they're always fouling spark plugs and such, they wouldn't have passed testing. That doesn't mean that they aren't having issues later on out in the field, but what are those issues? I'm out of the kubota dealer loop but I'm sure interested in what's going on with these things.
The sidekick was an afterthought in so many ways, which I pointed out a bunch of them the day we got the first one.
You can’t really go by that smell like you was Able to on old cars. EFI is completely different in that sense. My car clears epa standards perfectly but smells of unturned fuel out of the tailpipes. Perfectly normal.Funny thing is you can smell the unburnt fuel in the exhaust of mine all the time, not just when starting cold. I doubt it would pass an emissions test. The mechanic mentioned it could be a bad ecu but Kubota won't approve the almost $2k replacement. Maybe I'll check with the epa to see if they would check it per Kubotas filing if Kubota doesn't fix it.