I was advised to re-write my original post for clarity.
Hoping someone out there has had some experience with this and can offer advise -
We recently acquired a Kubota M9000DTC with a cab. It has run beautifully these past 6 months or so - until this past week when THE REAR-END overheated.
We had been bush hogging - about 10 acres - not overgrown, but pasture that had been grazed.
The rear-end / chunk became EXTREMELY hot - fumes from it - like hydraulic fuel burning came into the cab, smoking, etc. We thought it might actually catch fire. Smoke was "rolling" out of it. - The rear-end Diff. not anything attached to it (bush hog)
NOTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH THE ENGINE - which was not overheated at all.
We called the guy that had worked on some of our equipment in past - who is a recently retired Kubota mechanic, actually - and he said "some of them just do that and there is nothing you can do for it".
This just does not sound right ..... I certainly HOPE it is not right.
Has anyone had any experience with this?
THANK YOU
Bishop
Hoping someone out there has had some experience with this and can offer advise -
We recently acquired a Kubota M9000DTC with a cab. It has run beautifully these past 6 months or so - until this past week when THE REAR-END overheated.
We had been bush hogging - about 10 acres - not overgrown, but pasture that had been grazed.
The rear-end / chunk became EXTREMELY hot - fumes from it - like hydraulic fuel burning came into the cab, smoking, etc. We thought it might actually catch fire. Smoke was "rolling" out of it. - The rear-end Diff. not anything attached to it (bush hog)
NOTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH THE ENGINE - which was not overheated at all.
We called the guy that had worked on some of our equipment in past - who is a recently retired Kubota mechanic, actually - and he said "some of them just do that and there is nothing you can do for it".
This just does not sound right ..... I certainly HOPE it is not right.
Has anyone had any experience with this?
THANK YOU
Bishop