torch
Well-known member
Equipment
B7100HSD, B2789, B2550, B4672, 48" cultivator, homemade FEL and Cab
January 25, 2019. My clutch friction plate self-imolated. Tractor suddenly started making a horible metallic rattle, like the fan was hitting something, then shortly thereafter siezed. A spring broke and jammed the clutch against the housing. I replaced the friction plate, pressure plate assembly, throwout bearing, dust seal and pilot bushing with all OEM Kubota parts. The flywheel was fine when checked on a surface plate.
December 29, 2020. It happened again. As soon as I heard the noise, I recognized it, parked the tractor and split it, finding the friction plate spring assembly had fractured in a similar manner. Replaced it with another OEM friction plate. Also replaced the gasket with OEM. Everything else was fine. Clutch worked great.
Until yesterday, Dec. 25, 2022. I fired up the tractor, let it warm up for a few minutes, unplugged the block heater, reduced engine speed to idle, depressed the clutch and engaged the PTO. As I released the clutch I instantly recognized the same old sound. I quickly depressed the clutch and disengaged the PTO and the tractor seized.
I had spent about 6 hours the day before clearing the deep (2-3') but light snow left by the blizzard. There were no signs of problems. The tractor was under load to be sure, but I kept the travel speed down no shock loads - I didn't break any shear bolts on the blower anyway.
The only thing I never replaced in there the first time was the flywheel. But it checks out fine and it's no longer available from Kubota anyway. The transmission input shaft had no sign of play last time, so I doubt that's the issue. The tractor is an HST model, so the clutch gets used rarely -- starting, changing range and engaging or disengaging the PTO.
Of course, the Kubota dealers are both closed for the holidays, so I can't order parts today anyway, but I'm starting to wonder if I'm wasting my money on OEM. There are aftermarket friction plates available and usually I shy away from that sort of thing but I'm beginning to wonder if they are really any worse? Is there a heavier-duty option out there?
December 29, 2020. It happened again. As soon as I heard the noise, I recognized it, parked the tractor and split it, finding the friction plate spring assembly had fractured in a similar manner. Replaced it with another OEM friction plate. Also replaced the gasket with OEM. Everything else was fine. Clutch worked great.
Until yesterday, Dec. 25, 2022. I fired up the tractor, let it warm up for a few minutes, unplugged the block heater, reduced engine speed to idle, depressed the clutch and engaged the PTO. As I released the clutch I instantly recognized the same old sound. I quickly depressed the clutch and disengaged the PTO and the tractor seized.
I had spent about 6 hours the day before clearing the deep (2-3') but light snow left by the blizzard. There were no signs of problems. The tractor was under load to be sure, but I kept the travel speed down no shock loads - I didn't break any shear bolts on the blower anyway.
The only thing I never replaced in there the first time was the flywheel. But it checks out fine and it's no longer available from Kubota anyway. The transmission input shaft had no sign of play last time, so I doubt that's the issue. The tractor is an HST model, so the clutch gets used rarely -- starting, changing range and engaging or disengaging the PTO.
Of course, the Kubota dealers are both closed for the holidays, so I can't order parts today anyway, but I'm starting to wonder if I'm wasting my money on OEM. There are aftermarket friction plates available and usually I shy away from that sort of thing but I'm beginning to wonder if they are really any worse? Is there a heavier-duty option out there?