50 Hr service...

MacPhly

New member

Equipment
MX5200
Mar 1, 2019
14
1
3
Portland, Maine, United States
I just finished the 50 hour service on my MX5200. All went well procedurally but I was a little surprised by the appearance of the HST oil and the amount of crud and metal slivers stuck to the magnet on the filter. So I'm just checking with you fine folks to see what you found when you did your first service.

I followed the maintenance schedule and replaced 3 filters and the engine oil. HST/hydraulic oil is not due till 400 hours as I read it so I did not replace it.

I understand that the job of the filter is to in fact filter so that point is not lost on me but still... the oil I poured out of the filter and the crud on the magnet gave me pause to question what I was seeing. I took pictures but have not been able to upload them from my iphone because this site does not like
HEIC format pics and I can't seem to find a way to convert them.

Any perspective is much appreciated.
 

Creature Meadow

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2012 L4600, Disk, Brush Hog, GB60 Garden Bedder, GSS72 Grading Scraper
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What you saw is normal, mine as well had metal shavings stuck to the magnet. The magnet did it's job.

More will be along soon to let you know this is normal.

I did change my hydraulic oil near 200 hours instead of the 400 it states in the manual. I used SUDT2 and will now go with the 400 it says and do my filter at 200 hrs. Just a peace of mind for me.

For me about 50 hrs a year is normal so the filter once every 4 years is the plan. I change the engine oil every 2 years or equal to about 100 hrs.

Enjoy your Kubota, maintain it and it was last for years.

Jay
 

Bulldog

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M 9000 DTC, L 3000 DT
Mar 30, 2010
5,440
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Rocky Face, Georgia
It's normal to see metal but that's why I have and will always do a full service @50 hrs. I guarantee you if you pull on of the bottom plugs out it will still have tons of metal fillings in it. No way I could stand to know it was in my tractor for the next 400 hrs.

At the minimum you should at least change the oil in the front axle. It doesn't have a filter and it's full of metal like the rest of the tractor is. I've bought 3 new tractors and all of them had metal in the fluid. The second change was clean on all of them.
 

Russell King

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...but I was a little surprised by the appearance of the HST oil and the amount of crud and metal slivers stuck to the magnet on the filter.

... the oil I poured out of the filter and the crud on the magnet gave me pause to question what I was seeing.

I took pictures but have not been able to upload them from my iphone because this site does not like
HEIC format pics and I can't seem to find a way to convert them.

Any perspective is much appreciated.
Did you change all of the oil and was it oddly colored?

Or only the oil in the filter was oddly colored?

Most replies are assuming that you mean the second statement but you implied both, and there would be different replies to the first one.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 

Smokeless

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3901/Loader/Rear Blade/Box Blade/LP Mower/Pallet forks IH M,,Cub & sickle mower
Feb 5, 2018
237
9
18
Southern Illinois
Boy, is the thread on time. I am at 187 hrs 3901, 50 hour service was engine oil and transmission filter per manual. I thought nearing 200hrs I would change transmission oil and filter. Believe I will do that even though manual only calls for filter. Guess I will opt for expensive oil to.
 

MacPhly

New member

Equipment
MX5200
Mar 1, 2019
14
1
3
Portland, Maine, United States
Did you change all of the oil and was it oddly colored?

Or only the oil in the filter was oddly colored?

Most replies are assuming that you mean the second statement but you implied both, and there would be different replies to the first one.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
It was just the filter oil. Oil in the Hydraulic filter seemed cleaner than hst but not great. I will run it for the next 150hrs and change fluid with the next filter change.

Mac
 

MacPhly

New member

Equipment
MX5200
Mar 1, 2019
14
1
3
Portland, Maine, United States
As a side note on the subject of the 50 hr service... I had read or saw on YouTube that guys were losing up to 2 gallons of oil when changing the hst filter. Also read that parking tractor sideways on an incline would reduce oil loss. Might have read that here... can’t remember.... but that method works very well. I only lost about 1-2quarts. I highly recommend this method.

Mac
 

Kevin1

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Equipment
Husqvarna MZT 52, BX2380,FEL, Box blade, Landscape Rake
Dec 15, 2017
127
2
18
New Bern, N.C.
Really shows the importance of that first 50 hour. My 2380 screen was the same way. If you are not changing all the fluid on the 50 hour I found a #5 rubber plug works great when when you pull the screen out (that size works on the BX). You can get a bag of different size plugs on amazon very cheap.
 

Bmbbm

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Bx2370 land pride box blade 60"mmm kubota fel
May 29, 2016
282
6
18
Chillicothe mo
It's normal to see metal but that's why I have and will always do a full service @50 hrs. I guarantee you if you pull on of the bottom plugs out it will still have tons of metal fillings in it. No way I could stand to know it was in my tractor for the next 400 hrs.

At the minimum you should at least change the oil in the front axle. It doesn't have a filter and it's full of metal like the rest of the tractor is. I've bought 3 new tractors and all of them had metal in the fluid. The second change was clean on all of them.
Question for Bulldog. I was going to change the oil in my front axle on my BX. Got to reading the manual and it says at 400 hours< mine has 140> so i didnt. Do think it would be wise to go ahead and change it?
 

Bulldog

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M 9000 DTC, L 3000 DT
Mar 30, 2010
5,440
78
48
Rocky Face, Georgia
Question for Bulldog. I was going to change the oil in my front axle on my BX. Got to reading the manual and it says at 400 hours< mine has 140> so i didnt. Do think it would be wise to go ahead and change it?
I think it's wise to change all the fluid at 50 hrs. In fact the owners manual for my L3000 and M9000 specify doing a full service @50. Why they changed that is beyond me because the new ones have just as much crap in them as the old ones did.

Your front axle for example has the same metal fillings in it that the rest of the tractor does and it doesn't have any kind of filtration at all. So any metal in the case is rolling around all your bearings and gears doing what? Causing wear.

I believe if you change it now after seeing what comes out you'll want to kick your own a$$ for not doing it at 50. And after you see what's in the front axle you'll probably rethink waiting until 400 on the other fluid.

I understand the expense of doing a full service. Just for my 2 tractors is $1500+ but next time you're at you dealer ask them what a trans rebuild cost is for your tractor. I bet a lifetime of buying fluid is cheaper than the rebuild.
 

Redlands

New member
Sep 16, 2016
391
2
0
North Central Oklahoma
I think it's wise to change all the fluid at 50 hrs. In fact the owners manual for my L3000 and M9000 specify doing a full service @50. Why they changed that is beyond me because the new ones have just as much crap in them as the old ones did.

Your front axle for example has the same metal fillings in it that the rest of the tractor does and it doesn't have any kind of filtration at all. So any metal in the case is rolling around all your bearings and gears doing what? Causing wear.

I believe if you change it now after seeing what comes out you'll want to kick your own a$$ for not doing it at 50. And after you see what's in the front axle you'll probably rethink waiting until 400 on the other fluid.

I understand the expense of doing a full service. Just for my 2 tractors is $1500+ but next time you're at you dealer ask them what a trans rebuild cost is for your tractor. I bet a lifetime of buying fluid is cheaper than the rebuild.

[emoji106]
 

N7HEVN

Member

Equipment
MX5200, RCR2672, BB1572
Sep 12, 2019
40
1
8
Carrollton TX USA
As a side note on the subject of the 50 hr service... I had read or saw on YouTube that guys were losing up to 2 gallons of oil when changing the hst filter. Also read that parking tractor sideways on an incline would reduce oil loss. Might have read that here... can’t remember.... but that method works very well. I only lost about 1-2quarts. I highly recommend this method.

Mac
Am late to the email, but yeah this above is no-joke!
Here's a video that shows it, it's the first filter he changes in this guide -

I just did my 50 Hour maintenance last week, and I did save the filters. It noticed the metal shavings as well.
My tractor is 3 hours away from home, so please bear with me, as I need a couple/few weeks to get back there. Will post up some pictures for you, for comparison to your filter change.
 
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03marauderman

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Equipment
Kubota BX 23S
Sep 27, 2018
69
1
8
Plattekill
Excuse my ignorance here but, There's all this chatter about metal filings, shavings, ect and I don't see where anyone questioned or is concerned, other than its normal ? - Normal ???... I have to equate with other mechanical things that I have, and nothing else that I own or have owned, described has such an emphasis on metal shavings in oil or hydraulic systems....Try pulling your automatic transmission pan on your car or truck after 50 hrs. is it loaded with shavings? Is this debris a quality control issue with Kubota where the components are manufactured & not cleaned like some crude 3rd world nation? I would hope its not from the internals of the tractor itself....I can understand a couple of nuggets, but after pulling the filters & the remainder when you pull the plug is not normal in my mind.....I bought my tractor new & could have selected any other brand but chose Kubota as being the number one product. This internal debris issue doesn't really sit well & Its far from normal in my view.............
 

SDT

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multiple and various
Apr 15, 2018
3,260
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SE, IN
Excuse my ignorance here but, There's all this chatter about metal filings, shavings, ect and I don't see where anyone questioned or is concerned, other than its normal ? - Normal ???... I have to equate with other mechanical things that I have, and nothing else that I own or have owned, described has such an emphasis on metal shavings in oil or hydraulic systems....Try pulling your automatic transmission pan on your car or truck after 50 hrs. is it loaded with shavings? Is this debris a quality control issue with Kubota where the components are manufactured & not cleaned like some crude 3rd world nation? I would hope its not from the internals of the tractor itself....I can understand a couple of nuggets, but after pulling the filters & the remainder when you pull the plug is not normal in my mind.....I bought my tractor new & could have selected any other brand but chose Kubota as being the number one product. This internal debris issue doesn't really sit well & Its far from normal in my view.............
Manufacturing debris and normal for all manufacturers.

This is why manufacturer's recommend filters and sometimes lubricants be changed after a short period of field operation.

Auromobile transmissions are made in much higher volumes and not built to the tolerances that HST transmissions are.

Automobiles are also marketed to everyone and marketing pressures render initial fluid/filter changes prohibitive, regardless of the recommendations of the designers. Indeed, automobile manufactorers no longer recommend routine transmission fluid/filter changes partially because warranty analysis has shown that doing so causes more problems than it solves.

SDT
 
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NHSleddog

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B2650
Dec 19, 2019
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Manufacturing debris and normal for all manufacturers.

This is why manufacturer's recommend filters and sometimes lubricants be changed after a short period of field operation.

Auromobile transmissions are made in much higher volumes and not built to the tolerances that HST transmissions are.

Automobiles are also marketed to everyone and marketing pressures render initial fluid/filter changes prohibitive, regardless of the recommendations of the designers. Indeed, automobile manufactorers no longer recommend routine transmission fluid/filter changes partially because warranty analysis has shown that doing so causes more problems than it solves.

SDT
There are also many surfaces that are honed to allow for better fitment. Like piston walls, all that honing comes off in tiny specs of metal.

Add to that that most tractors are diesel. Diesels have higher tolerances due to the compression needed and will not allow the same size debris in many cases which puts it back into the fluid.

My hydro at 50 hours looked like a light gray metallic paint. I changed it all.
 
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nbryan

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B2650 BH77 LA534 54" ssqa Forks B2782B BB1560 Woods M5-4 MaxxHaul 50039
Jan 3, 2019
1,240
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Hadashville, Manitoba, Canada
My hydro at 50 hours looked like a light gray metallic paint. I changed it all.
That doesn't sound good. Did you photograph the old fluid? Keep some? For proof that there was an issue with the fluid and/or hydraulic system in your new tractor at 50 hours. May help greatly if there's a warranty issue come up later.

My B2650 fluid at 50 hours, and at 200 hours when I changed the tranny filter, looked almost new, no metallic color, cloudiness. Just a very slight tan color, completely transparent. I'm 40 hours from my 400-hour full change, and will keep this thread in mind when I finally drop the original oil.

But at 50 hours having fluid that looks like silver paint sounds to me like something terrible is going on!