You can probably buy OEM on eBay. Or mail order from Messick's or Coleman, if a dealer isn't close.What’s everybody using on their tractors I went on eBay and saw some knock offs but a little leary of using those
Yea I’m going to buy OEM just thought I would get on here and see if there were other filters just as good as Kubota OEM filters, your right about the knock offs too there’s a filter advertised on Amazon that has the K painted around it much like the Kubota filters but at half the cost it has to be made from cheap materials, appreciate the feedbackIf you use your tractor much, you will spend more on fuel in a month or two than the price of an OEM filter. If you need to economize somewhere, skip the Starbucks latte, whiskey and cigs for a week
Trying to save money buying sketchy filters is very poor economy. I don't mind spending money on quality equipment because it is going to last IF you take proper care of it. When I installed my 40KW diesel powered standby generator three years ago, I ordered three proper Mitsubishi oil and fuel filters at the same time I placed the order for the genset. I order Allison spin on transmission filters for my GMC pickup 6 at a time and when I get low I order another case of 6 so there is never a question of having the correct OEM filter on hand.
Your local Kubota dealer may not be the best place to buy Kubota filters but if so then buy from another authorized Kubota dealer. It is very easy to create counterfeit products, labeling, and packaging and this practice has become extremely lucrative with online sales. There are a lot of items I won't purchase from Amazon because counterfeits in those product categories are so common; fake but realistic looking SD and CF cards are a good example but even lowly "coin cell" lithium batteries are another highly counterfeited product. Ebay is actually safer at this point because seller feedback is better "policed" and unlike Amazon, Ebay feedback isn't pooled together under one seller/item for different sellers and products.
My doctoral dissertation years ago focused upon grey markets, leakage between market segments, and free riding but counterfeiting was a related area I had to touch upon.
You are welcome! And with Amazon, the photo and what you actually receive don't always match and reviews aren't that useful either because what was true a year ago may be very different when it gets to what you order now.Yea I’m going to buy OEM just thought I would get on here and see if there were other filters just as good as Kubota OEM filters, your right about the knock offs too there’s a filter advertised on Amazon that has the K painted around it much like the Kubota filters but at half the cost it has to be made from cheap materials, appreciate the feedback
At $6/gal, with a burn rate of over 3 gallons per hour, you only need to run the tractor 4 hours at PTO speed to equal the price of the OEM HST filter. Adjust your hours slightly if your fuel cost is a little less than mine. It definitely won't take a month or more. Point is well taken.If you use your tractor much, you will spend more on fuel in a month or two than the price of an OEM filter. If you need to economize somewhere, skip the Starbucks latte, whiskey and cigs for a week
...I order Allison spin on transmission filters for my GMC pickup 6 at a time and when I get low I order another case of 6 so there is never a question of having the correct OEM filter on hand.
Your local Kubota dealer may not be the best place to buy Kubota filters but if so then buy from another authorized Kubota dealer. It is very easy to create counterfeit products, labeling, and packaging and this practice has become extremely lucrative with online sales. There are a lot of items I won't purchase from Amazon because counterfeits in those product categories are so common; fake but realistic looking SD and CF cards are a good example but even lowly "coin cell" lithium batteries are another highly counterfeited product. Ebay is actually safer at this point because seller feedback is better "policed" and unlike Amazon, Ebay feedback isn't pooled together under one seller/item for different sellers and products.
Allison recommendations vary based upon severity of service and type of fluid used, my use doesn't fit the severe duty recommendation (the 1000 series Allison is used in a lot of applications including refuse trucks and transit buses which are severe service) but I split the difference between it and general duty use and change the filter once a year or at 20K whichever comes first.How often do you change the filters on your truck's trans? Holy cow, a case at a time. I think its 150k filter replacement on a current Ford diesel, but I know you don't like transmissions without an external filter.
Finally, I definitely agree on the fraudulent OEM parts. Best to just acquire from the dealer.