So, my barely 1 yr old Kubota M7040 starts putting out blue smoke when running at any RPM, otherwise it starts and seems fine. I change all the filters including both air filters and fuel filter. A little better maybe, but not much.
Take it to dealer and they reported unburned fuel was going into exhaust and making black smoke and blue smoke was caused by unburned fuel bypassing the rings and thinning the oil in the crankcase. They hooked to a remote fuel supply, but problem continued. Emission equip checked ok, but checked individual cylinder exhaust temp and found front cylinder cold.
They then found front cylinder to have low compression, but valve backlash ok.
They then filed a pre-claim with Kubota on the basis of "low compression on front cylinder, front cylinder running cold and unburned fuel going into exhaust and crankcase."
Kubota finally responded after 4 days with the following:
"Compression is low, but within 10% spec of other cylinders, but the rings are so bad your dumping oil into the crankcase. At this point low compression and ring issue is not enough to validate warranty. At 729 hours this sounds more like a dusting and than a factory defect. Please tear down and inspect and validate a defect, but keep in mind if no defect is found then customer will be responsible for total repair bill."
What a crock! Its going to be about $1000 just to do this inspection. (Edit: technically $2000 for tear down and rebuild)
What I really don't understand is how could the front cylinder possibly not be firing (and therefore burning this fuel) if the compression is within spec? I'm waiting to find out what the compression actually is. I might possible have a failed intake gasket (letting air in and dusting the cylinder), but it should still be firing if compression is within spec, no?
My private mech (non-warranty stuff), suggested that the injector may be bad and overloading front cylinder with fuel to the point it would not fire. That would not explain the lowered compression, but can fuel still get in the crankcase if the rings were ok?
Any thoughts out there. I really need my tractor back.
Take it to dealer and they reported unburned fuel was going into exhaust and making black smoke and blue smoke was caused by unburned fuel bypassing the rings and thinning the oil in the crankcase. They hooked to a remote fuel supply, but problem continued. Emission equip checked ok, but checked individual cylinder exhaust temp and found front cylinder cold.
They then found front cylinder to have low compression, but valve backlash ok.
They then filed a pre-claim with Kubota on the basis of "low compression on front cylinder, front cylinder running cold and unburned fuel going into exhaust and crankcase."
Kubota finally responded after 4 days with the following:
"Compression is low, but within 10% spec of other cylinders, but the rings are so bad your dumping oil into the crankcase. At this point low compression and ring issue is not enough to validate warranty. At 729 hours this sounds more like a dusting and than a factory defect. Please tear down and inspect and validate a defect, but keep in mind if no defect is found then customer will be responsible for total repair bill."
What a crock! Its going to be about $1000 just to do this inspection. (Edit: technically $2000 for tear down and rebuild)
What I really don't understand is how could the front cylinder possibly not be firing (and therefore burning this fuel) if the compression is within spec? I'm waiting to find out what the compression actually is. I might possible have a failed intake gasket (letting air in and dusting the cylinder), but it should still be firing if compression is within spec, no?
My private mech (non-warranty stuff), suggested that the injector may be bad and overloading front cylinder with fuel to the point it would not fire. That would not explain the lowered compression, but can fuel still get in the crankcase if the rings were ok?
Any thoughts out there. I really need my tractor back.
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