I have an L3301 purchased last March. Clutch failed in less than 5 hours. Took it back to dealer and after alot of back and forth between them and Kubota, Kubota agreed to pay for warranty repair. (dealer never divulged what the repair was specifically) Shortly thereafter (not sure exact hours) it started failing again and they “adjusted” the clutch. Failed again at 100 hours. Took it back to the dealer and of course I got the “wearable item not covered by warranty” response from them and the Kubota service rep who happened to be visiting while the tractor was there. I expressed my opinion to them that something has to be causing it to wear out prematurely. I explained to them that the tractor I owned previous to this one ran for 16 years before the clutch wore out, so their argument that I was operating the tractor improperly had no validity and the problem has to be something mechanical with the tractor. Their only response was to give me a $4080 quote to repair again. I am curious if anyone here may have had the same problem and were successful with having Kubota make good concerning the situation and if so, what steps were taken to get it resolved.
I've done my share of clutches, some real low hour units.
In every one of them, they had a loader on them, and they are/were gear-drive tractors. I only put 2 clutches in HST tractors in 30 years (or just shy of 30...close enough). And HST clutches are dirt cheap in comparison (usually) to the dual stage DT clutches used in the 3901's and such.
"Something is causing the clutch to fail". Well, yes, there is always a "something". What is it? That-is the question.
I'm not pointing a finger here (yet) because I have not seen YOUR clutch or your tractor. With that said, the VAST majority of clutch failures on these DT tractors is due to riding the clutch while pushing the loader bucket into a pile of dirt/gravel/etc or using the clutch to pull trailers or slipping it excessively in stops and starts (such as directional changes) or using the clutch to vary the speed and torque to the wheels while trying to pull things, rocks, vehicles, trees, logs, other tractors, bulldozers, OR sometimes I saw where the user was using their DT tractor to push trees and such, slipping the clutch the whole time.
Those are just the things I knew of, I'm sure there were other instances that I didn't know about. Owner never tells you this stuff UNTIL they get their way, or maybe on a forum or group.
Clutches do not fail unless slippage happens. The question is, why is it slipping? Is this user-related, or is there another problem? If there's another problem, it's almost always obvious. Fork lever sticking in the bellhousing is an easy one, and generally if that's the case, you can barely push the clutch pedal down and it will barely return itself back up. Or if the springs in the pressure plate are failing, and if that's the case, the clutch will slip the minute it's put into service. Or maybe it won't disengage when you push the pedal down, depends on how they (or it, in the case of a diaphragm style clutch) fails.
Again I'd have to see the old clutch to know, but the vast majority of the time it's user-related. YOu have to let the gears do the work not the clutch, and it's VERY easy to let the clutch do the work via slipping it; and a lot of times you don't even know you're doing it. I'm guilty too and I catch myself every once in a while doing the same on my little massey ferguson.
your 16 year old tractor wasn't this one, so that arguement means nothing to anyone. It only means you had another tractor for 16 years, it doesn't say what kind, brand, style, model, type. Again that argument is quite common, and holds little value to the people you're arguing with.
they bought you one clutch and you expect them to buy another one. Good luck. They'll often give you one goodwill, and I'm highly suprised they gave you that one. Clutches are wear items, it's a specific exclusion in the warranty booklet that used to come with all tractors. Most people wipe their butt with it and go one with life, then gripe about "my clutch ain't under warranty? What kind of company is this?" I sold JD for a while too, was no different. Clutches are excluded from warranty because they are wear items.
You used up one goodwill. Next time it might be something else it needs and you've used up a good will. I'd be careful about this situation. Dealers have ways to communicate with each other, and if you showed up at another dealer with a separate problem later on, they may know your prior situation already. Kubota looks at prior claims as well and they can use those to determine how the unit is used, which can play into potential warranty claim processing and how the dealer is compensated.