Hersheyfarm
Veteran Member
Just think if ambient temps where 85 degrees you most likely would see 178 temps. Run at 2700 rpm(the way kubota wants us to) digging 10' deep holes in wet sticky clay. yup, there goes pumps. I think kubota dropped the ball with the m59 and their answer is 180+ temps are ok.I finally got a chance to check the hydraulic fluid temperature, after working the backhoe for a few hours peeling a bank back. I have an excavation with a cut 6-7 feet high, vertical, at the back where it cuts into the hill (nothing is flat around here). The job was to slope it back 12' or so above the 4' level. Anyway, a lot of typical backhoe work, a lot of cylinder action and fluid motion. The ambient temperature was about 65. After 90 min or so at a moderate level (2K RPM) I measured 140 at multiple spots with the IR gun. The temp down the fill hole was not appreciably different than the reservoir housing or the pump end of the main hydraulic pump. I increased the RPMs to 2.2K and ran hard for another couple of hours, after which the temps averaged about 158 measured a multiple locations. This is higher than I am used to but I was working it harder at a higher RPM than usual (I did not want to go any harder as I was on the edge of a 7' vertical cut and anyway this was precision work trying to get a level surface). I could not test the in/out temps of the oil cooler as they are not easy to get to while the engine covers are on. My feeling is that these are normal temps when working hard for hours - they are not much different than my truck AT when driving unloaded. At no point was there any issue with performance or power.
First, I dont think they put a big enough cooler on it, second the engine mounted pump for this kind of flow is a mistake. Theyve designed a 45-50k hobby machine instead of a "full size TLB replacement" like they claim. I'll try and keep it because it is a usefull chore tool around the farm, but I am going to have to back to full size tlb.