Buying Advice New Products for 2012 ???

   / New Products for 2012 ???
  • Thread Starter
#11  
MessickFarmEqu said:
Your right about that part anyway.

BX's don't go Tier4i until 2014 (i think). Mid year product introductions are never revolutionary stuff. I'd be pretty surprised to see a mid year BX as it would miss the selling season for that size tractor.

I'm curious - Kohler's new, just announced small diesel engines are supposed to be the largest investment in r & d they have ever done, (ever in their history). Of course they provide engines for many competitors of Kubota (some of their prime competitors).

If, as you suggest, Kubota is not in any rush to produce new and more efficient product in the B and BX line, wouldn't that be a gaping hole for them while new exciting advanced product is released thru the competitive channel?
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #12  
I'm curious - Kohler's new, just announced small diesel engines are supposed to be the largest investment in r & d they have ever done, (ever in their history). Of course they provide engines for many competitors of Kubota (some of their prime competitors).

If, as you suggest, Kubota is not in any rush to produce new and more efficient product in the B and BX line, wouldn't that be a gaping hole for them while new exciting advanced product is released thru the competitive channel?

The size of Kohler's investment in R&D is relative and the only way to actually measure their investment is to compare it to competitors costs to develop a similar product. The size of an R&D investment alone doesn't equate to a quality product. The experience level of their engineers, their domain knowledge with diesel technology, their ability to manufacture, etc:, are all part of the equation to success.

You seem to have a special interest in Kohler's diesel engine success, what is your relationship with them?
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #13  
If I read the PR correctly (a week or so ago), didn't Kohler buy Lombardini? If so, they are not starting at ground zero designing diesel engines. I'm sure Kubota has lot's of diesel tech in the pipeline too, but just what and when it is implemented in their production engines who knows (beyond what's needed to meet the increasingly stricter EPA regs).

The other thing to keep in mind is that Kohler is an engine supplier exclusively AFAIK, while Kubota's tractor, etc., division provides a set market for a large share of their engines. For Kohler to gain share, they will need some advantage in cost, performance or technology. The new engines just announced are a play for that additional market share, and a welcome one. We'll see what the competition comes out with in due time.
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #14  
A few years ago, at at Kubota Dealer Meeting, I was told that 80% of Kubota Diesel engines were used in other than Kubota equipment. The Engine Division sells many more engines than the Tractor Division sells.
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #15  
The Lombardini/Kohler engine announcement is for an engine to meet Tier 4 final and will not be available until the end of 2012. They are 42 to 71 HP. The big news is they will be Kohler engines worldwide instead of Kohler where Kohler name is well known and Lombardini where Lombardini is well known. They will be built in Reggio Emilia, Italy, which is about a half hour from the Ferrari plant in Maranello. They announced they will get to the required particulate level without a particulate trap. I don't know Kubota's plan for getting to that level.
 
   / New Products for 2012 ???
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Monster5601 said:
The size of Kohler's investment in R&D is relative and the only way to actually measure their investment is to compare it to competitors costs to develop a similar product. The size of an R&D investment alone doesn't equate to a quality product. The experience level of their engineers, their domain knowledge with diesel technology, their ability to manufacture, etc:, are all part of the equation to success.

You seem to have a special interest in Kohler's diesel engine success, what is your relationship with them?

I have no relationship with Kohler. However, there is a dual purpose in my focus on Kohler.

1. There is regulatory compliance requirements for all diesel manufacturers which includes Kubota. many here seem to believe there will be no changes to BX and b models during the 2012 calendar year. that viewpoint seems illogical if compliance is mandated by 2013 and 2014 (unless your belief is that Kubota is merely a "'me too" producer). by comparison, in 2006 or 2007 imagine the perspective difference in Ford versus GM. One was visionary and one was absolutely not. I happen to believe Kubota is far more like Ford was and not like GM was. Which means Kubota will not wait to the last seconds of 2013 and 2014 deadlines.

2. a strategic shift in the market. I believe the size of kohlers effort will put great pressure on kawasaki and sugar for several reasons. Kubotas largest competitors use many Kohler and kawasaki engines now. But if Kohler has designed a more competitive and efficient diesel design that SURPASSES compliance standards with greater efficiency, then Kubotas largest competitors would greatly benefit in tractor sales IN ADDITION to the engine sales business of Kohler. Again - compare the huge success Ford had compared to GM in the past 4 years because they were visionary. Kohler has invested major money on this effort for very specific reasons. That tells me if Kubota is as Sharp as I think they are, then they are doing the same thing right now and have yet to announce it. OR we can go with the premise Kubota isn't a Ford and is more like GM was.

My conclusion then, is that Kubota is more visionary than many others here are giving them credit for, and is much busier in r and d right now, than many here are giving them credit for, BECAUSE Kohler developments are bigger than many here are giving them credit for on an impact in the industry. This is more than an engine issue, its about the products those engines go into.

Simple question to explain a great deal: in virtually any country on the planet - why is it that diesel fuel costs less to manufacture, yet is priced higher by ten to twenty percent than gasoline? Answer: diesel engines on a worldwide basis are in greater demand and future usage than are gas.
 
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   / New Products for 2012 ??? #17  
Er, I don't know a whole lot about diesels compared to many here at TBN, so excuse me for pointing out that Kubota already has several series of diesel engines on the market that meet full Tier 4:

Frontier Power Products - Kubota liquid-cooled diesel engines

Other diesel manufacturers like Yanmar also have Tier 4 diesels on the market.

Here are the major diesel manufacturers who actually signed the agreement in 1996 with the EPA that put the whole diesel emission standards system into effect: Caterpillar, Cummins, Deere, Detroit Diesel, Deutz, Isuzu, Komatsu, Kubota, Mitsubishi, Navistar, New Holland, Wis-Con, and Yanmar. I'm thinking Kohler's "new" introduction isn't the breakthrough it's made out to be in the marketing hype... it's their way of saying "me too" for what the big boys are already heavily into.

Here's a nice summary of the emissions standards, by the way:

Emission Standards: USA: Nonroad Diesel Engines

Something tells me they're not trembling in their boots over in Osaka about Kohler and Tier 4... they have it pretty well covered.
 
   / New Products for 2012 ???
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Grandad4 said:
Er, I don't know a whole lot about diesels compared to many here at TBN, so excuse me for pointing out that Kubota already has several series of diesel engines on the market that meet full Tier 4:

Frontier Power Products - Kubota liquid-cooled diesel engines

Other diesel manufacturers like Yanmar also have Tier 4 diesels on the market.

Here are the major diesel manufacturers who actually signed the agreement in 1996 with the EPA that put the whole diesel emission standards system into effect: Caterpillar, Cummins, Deere, Detroit Diesel, Deutz, Isuzu, Komatsu, Kubota, Mitsubishi, Navistar, New Holland, Wis-Con, and Yanmar. I'm thinking Kohler's "new" introduction isn't the breakthrough it's made out to be in the marketing hype... it's their way of saying "me too" for what the big boys are already heavily into.

Here's a nice summary of the emissions standards, by the way:

Emission Standards: USA: Nonroad Diesel Engines

Something tells me they're not trembling in their boots over in Osaka about Kohler and Tier 4... they have it pretty well covered.

You offered some fine points and links for readers to consider.

However, a key point of my perspective, is not merely achieving tier 4 requirements. What Kohler new designs do, if true, is they accomplish ALL the tier 4 requirements WITHOUT the filtering mechanism that everyone else is using.

Today I talked to a design engineer for engines for semi tractors. He said, if the claims are true, it would be the same as not having an egr in a semi but fully qualifying anyway. in his world, that means a semi owner would save at least $1600 to $2000 per year in maintenance and add 20% mileage improvement EVERY year. In car parlance, its the development of fuel injection as a technology impact.

My point is, Kohler announcement and materials - if true, would alter diesel impact far beyond TIer 4 issues. It's a technology step, just as fuel injection in cars and trucks forever altered carburetor and acceleration issues and reliability in car technology.

I believe Kubota is capable of competing, but the point is, at present, if Kohler new designs match their claims, Kubota has nothing currently out to match it, nor does any other engine manufacturer that I am aware of based on target market and costs. if Kohler can deliver as promised, if if if, kawasaki may have significant problems keeping their engines in our competitors units and same for some others - and Kubota will be late to the party.
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #19  
My Kioti DK45 has what they call an interim tieir 4 engine..... what is that exactly
 
   / New Products for 2012 ??? #20  
My Kioti DK45 has what they call an interim tieir 4 engine..... what is that exactly

The way I read it, EPA gave certain categories of engines a temporary break on one category of pollutants - particulate (soot) emissions - required under the full Tier 4. The time window for the temporary standard is about to expire.
 

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