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Idiot lights |
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D17JIM
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Points: 340 |
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Posted: 11 Feb 2010 at 1:42pm |
OT: My sons Kubota's oil light is coming on and staying on until the tractor is speeded up cnsiderably. According to him this is a change and he was wondering if it could be the oil pump or the sensor or the light. I said yes. He said the tractor sounds fine as always and has never used any oil. It's a 3 cy diesel. Is there any testing I can do before he just changes the sensor and or light. Hate to drop the pan but if we need to we can haul it to my shop and tackle the job. Any suggestions before we do that. THX, Jim
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Rawleigh
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: White Stone, VA Points: 421 |
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Put a Tee where the pressure sender is and put a back mounted mechanical gauge on it as well as the idiot light
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Gregor
Silver Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Prague, Ne Points: 305 |
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I'd get a pressure guage and check the pressure. I don't know the spec's but your dealer should. There is a chance that the sending unit is bad and needs more pressure to turn the light out (hopefully). Also does it take more RPM to turn out the light when the engine is warm, if so that is and indication of low oil pressure due to something out of clearance . I don't know much about kobuta, but get a pressure check done. If low, then you got a project to figure out where. Good Luck.
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Gerald J.
Orange Level Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: Hamilton Co, IA Points: 5636 |
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I have also seen the oil pressure switch be the cause of low oil pressure as it was leaking through the switch.
Gerald J. |
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D17JIM
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Points: 340 |
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Thanks to all. I hope to get over there and check it out Saturday. The T idea is a good one if I can find a metric T. Darn metric stuff is still hard to find around here. Jim
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firebrick43
Orange Level Joined: 10 Dec 2009 Location: Warren County Points: 592 |
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Are you sure its metric? Many metric tractors and engines still use SAE NPT and JIC fittings.
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DiyDave
Orange Level Access Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Gambrills, MD Points: 52139 |
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I had a kubota, that would act like you describe, I would put a mechanical gauge on it, as the other poster said. If that confirms drop in pressure, try dropping the oil pan, and take the suction tube off of the pump at the joint. There is an o-ring that got hard, and cracked, when the oil got thin enough it would suck air. That model was a 2 cyl, L185, if I remember the # right.
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