Agreed vis a vis early models.
I can envision rare circumstances when electrical loads might exceed alternator output at whatever engine RPM during (or not during) regeneration operations, especially in situations when the battery is not fully charged. I can also understand why Kubota might have decided to institute an engineering change replacing the "standard" alternator with the "cab" alternator so as to eliminate such potential issues.
That said, low voltage is NOT the cause of the overwhelming majority of regen issues with the B3350 and other machines using the same engine.
SDT
I solved the Kubota 3350 Regen issue, at least for myself. Try this:
I have had tons of issues with the terrible DPF system on my Kubota 3350b. The Regen light would come on and would not go off. Eventually it would demand parked regen. That would fail too and it would beep once a second until I took it to the dealer.
I noticed this did not happen in the summer, just in the winter and spring and fall. The dealer said that when he was testing it, it was not getting hot enough. I suggested putting a blanket on it, he ignored that.
I started having the issue again this week. I went through the process of failed automatic Regen, failed parked regen, and finally tried my blanket idea.
With one heavy moving blanket covering the whole engine and radiator but not the exhaust, the temperature never went above three bars. With two blankets, I was able to get it to 4 bars. With three blankets, I got it to 6 bars and successfully ran the Regen and the errors are all cleared now.
I guess the engine just is too cold by default to run the Regen.
I have had tons of issues with the terrible DPF system on my Kubota 3350b. The Regen light would come on and would not go off. Eventually it would demand parked regen. That would fail too and it would beep once a second until I took it to the dealer.I noticed this did not happen
joelx.com