I’m at 51 hours’ have been the only operator and have not yet had a regen on my L4701. Most of the time I’m running at PTO throttle but seems strange that it hasn’t gone into regen yet.
Hey Fido, I’m not treating it special just running it like I think I should. I don’t shut down every time I get off but when I’m using it I’m not lugging it. Sometimes it will sit several minutes while getting a drink or taking a quick break.My l3901 regened at 19 and 17 hrs so far. I don’t drive it to keep the dpf happy I use it like a normal tractor. If it regens more I assume it’s made for it. I’m not shutting it off every time I get off to do something or rev it up ASAP without letting warm up etc. I guess we will see how things go. Happy tractoring
"At the worst possible time", indeed! I run both a new (100 hours) L3301 tractor and Kubota U25 mini excavator, and I hugely enjoy NOT having to mess with the regens on the mini. I HATE running at a higher rpm then is actually needed to perform the work, and not being able, without guilt, of leaving it idling a bit.Have had mine about 7 months. Started with 58 hours when I bought it. Regions every 35-50-ish hours. Usually starts at the absolute worst time, so I just drop the bush hog and mow for about 15-20minutes until it does it thing. I typically run mine at PTO speed for all tasks.
Yesterday, at 143.8 hrs I had my third regen on my MX4800. Could not have happened at a worse time. I was about 100' up a very steep grade, with my grapple pulling blackberry vines out to swamp in a new trail/path. It was steep enough that if I stopped I would just spin 4 wheels if I tried to go up. All of a sudden I had a squealing noise, I thought I had a blackberry vine in the engine, so I shut down, climbed down into the blackberries, opened the hood and searched for the intruding vine, could not find one. Closed up, started up and noticed the regen light on, I idled down the hill backwards, (regen and increase throttle lights on), got on the level and throttled up, it took about 15 minutes.Have had mine about 7 months. Started with 58 hours when I bought it. Regions every 35-50-ish hours. Usually starts at the absolute worst time, so I just drop the bush hog and mow for about 15-20minutes until it does it thing. I typically run mine at PTO speed for all tasks.
I agree. My experience with my L3560 coming up on 4 yrs old, is that the dpf filter fills the most during the 5 minutes or so it takes the engine to warm up. The 60 series tractors have a bar graph in the panel that shows how full the filter is getting, and depending on how cold it is and if there are additives in the fuel, the dpf gains 2 to 4% in warming from a cold start. After that it gains little or decreases. I run it at an rpm appropriate to the task. Since I know a regen is coming from the graph, and I might want to get it done while I have something to do at high rpm, I might idle it to get it to kick over to 100 and start the regen. None of the diesel engines like to be lugged, so use appropriate rpm is fine as far as I am concerned. The only thing different is that there is no point in leaving these common rail engines idling when the tractor is stopped for a break. They are easy to start.Yesterday, at 143.8 hrs I had my third regen on my MX4800. Could not have happened at a worse time.
Of interest here, for the first 90 hours or so I kept the rpms high all the time, never idled, and shut down quick. had a regen in the mid 40s and second one..70 or 80 I think. Since then I have been treating her like I think one should, idle to warm up, low rpm for small tasks, high rpm for work, brush hogging etc. Seems to have made no difference on the time for regen.
M