I thought I fixed that right after posting. It has been tough being diagnosed with long covid that I got from the second vaccine and brain fog is the worst part of it. Kubota has not offered changing the oil viscosity as a fix to anyone yet. That just affects viscosity and not lubricity changing. Letting the internet come up with a solution to a manufacturers problem just isn't the proper way to handle it. Really getting some mad at Kubota and others happy to let you know Kubota doesn't know how to make gas side by sides. Sure seems that Kubota knows nothing about how to fix this engine that they just used from a closing down Subaru small engine division. Having to swap out parts to figure out what the problem is as the mechanic told me, really doesn't sound right in this world of sustainability and computer data gathering abilities.
If the manual recommends a 10w-40 oil and you also have gas getting into the crankcase, I would definitely use a 20w-50 oil, maybe 1 quart of something even thicker.what weight oil would be best to run in these to combat the issue?
Cause Kubota wants you to excessively warm up that engine anyways, a thicker oil should help prevent the gas blowby on the rings. I run supreme gas in all my small gas motors, it burns more efficiently and has less ethanol. I also would put a hotter spark plugs in, to help eliminate waste of gas during the combustion stage. Spark plug gap is also very important, too small of gap may give to weak of a spark, too wide of a gap, causes the plug not to fire properly. It may be a fix, it might not be a fix, but it's worth a shot and it's low cost effort, thats for sure.
If the term recommend is used, it's not a requirement. The CDC/government recommends everyone to get the Covid Vax jab, but that's not a requirement for me or anyone else. @Sidekick Letting the internet (government) come up with a solution to a manufacturers (pandemic) problem just isn't the proper way to handle it. Look what that vaccine got you now..
I'm just trying to help you or @catalyst, anyone else with a simple approach. Do with it, as you wish.
Sometimes a change is needed, whether a manufacturer designed it otherwise. When I served overseas, some us made the decision to not grease the 30mm chain guns on the aircraft, given the desert environment. The grease was actually a requirement, but it also meant premature wear/failure/malfunction on the weapon. When the aircraft were not landing/take offs on concrete/asphalt it became a huge problem. Most of the time the aircraft had to land in small FOBs for fuel, rockets, missiles, and ammo on unimproved surfaces (out in the desert) and the sand would accumulate on the weapons because of the grease. In aviation, there are many chemicals, sprays, greases at our disposal. We cleaned the 30mm weapons of grease, we used numerous coats of solid film lubricant(aka dry film lubricant) instead of the grease. Mission success, the aircraft would come in daily, we just took air nozzle to the weapons if they were not used. We had 2 spare weapons ready to swap out if the aircraft came back and the weapons were used on mission.