Troverman.
Another point. My turbo does continue to spin with engine shut down. The duration is very short.
Mike, earlier post, explains. The air pressure generated by the turbo has nowhere to go. There is immediate resistance. Valves are closed, so backpressure causes the impeller to stop because it can't overcome said resistance.
So continued oil circulation is moot. The residual oil does encounter turbo heat, and for my investment, it shall be a synthetic bath.
Saying that kubota does NOT recommend synthetic crankcase lubricant is disingenuous. They do NOT restrict its' use either. They merely state the mineral based oils meet their minimum requirements.
In fact, UDT is now UDT2 and full synthetic, engine oil likely NOT far behind.
We are each individually responsible for the engine health of our tractors, my practices will error on the side of caution, applicable wives tales not withstanding.
EDIT: EGT? Do you mean EGR? Mine has common rail, high pressure, and EGR, NO DPF, Engine HAS coolant thermostat. Low sulfur fuel required but the limit is 500 PPM, NOT the DPF spec.
TROVERMAN,
True turbo impeller spins fast, however it is driven by exhaust thrust. Consequently, an idling engine is making very little exhaust pressure. This is why turbo spool up and whine when engine is accelerated. Gonna listen w/ stethoscope, but post shut down spin cycle is really short.
And think about your argument. Synthetic offers greater change intervals. TRANSLATION: Synthetic provides greater protection from heat, therefore maintains viscosity longer, exactly what is desired to protect the turbo. Actually the turbo on my MX is minute, and the air volume of exhaust from 148 cu. in. engine is rather insignificant, unit never seems very hot, gonna check the temp w/ laser thermometer to determine the average reading.
Not aware of Kubota 50 hr revision. Would like to hear from a 2017 or 18 owner, wherein the manual states filters only for hydraulic oil at 50 hours.