My Hoe
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2010
- Messages
- 560
- Location
- NYS--Various Parts
- Tractor
- Kubota B3000HSDCC, BH77, 5' Belly Mower, 6' Hyd. Angle Plow
OK guys sorry I kept you in suspense for so long. I ran the tractor for approximately 20 hours on three cylinders because I didn't have time to put it in the shop. I started it up on the morning I was going to take it in to the shop. I left it idling while I went and hooked up to the trailer. when I came back it had dumped a bunch of fuel into the oil pan and puked a bunch of fuel/oil out of the exhaust. I winched her on the trailer got it to the shop took all the injectors out and went and had them tested. One was stuck closed. I suspected I blew some rings so I bought a compression tester and none of the fittings wood fit in the glow plug or injector holes. So I took the head off took the oil pan off and pulled all the Pistons no broke rings. Put it all back together got it started and it ran for 10 minutes and then got a bunch of fuel in the oil in the pan again. The kubota service man said it was most likely the fuel pump was letting fuel passed into the oil. Spent another hundred dollars on a new pump after spending close to 700 on rings connecting rod bearings and a head gasket got the new pump put on tonight. I got it started up and it did the same thing. The Kubota man said The only possibility left is The injector pump. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Holy CRAP that's a lot of work--TWICE! (It's no wonder we haven't heard back from you, sooner--LOL).
You obviously have really strong mechanical skills (and big ****s ) to just tear down your engine, as you did--Kudos!.
But it leaves me confused (no offense). IIRC, the tractor rolled, and most folks (myself included) expected that (partial) "hydro-locking" had bent a rod.
(And again, no offense, but since you didn't say, I have to ask): did you check the rods, while they were out, for any bends/twists, "shortness," etc...?"
And how much do a set of rods cost?
Since the popular theory is that a rod is bent, were it me (lacking your level of internal engine work skills/experience and ***s), before taking anything apart, I'd have checked compression (with a fitting that actually worked--I've never checked compression on a diesel, so I can't tell you if it's done through the injector holes, glow plug holes, or both) and I would have had THE DEALER mic out the rods, to confirm that none are bent, before I went any further.
And I can't imagine how "the kubota" man sees the rolling of the tractor causing the injector pump to fail.... (Unless, as was mentioned, there is a seal/gasket between it and the block, and when one runs while rolled, that seal/gasket gets ruptured...?) Nor (as was mentioned) his theory about the fuel pump being bad....
Re: "Pattern Failures: Is the "kubota man" working at a franchised Kubota dealer?
The reason I ask is that even though I, myself, do not enjoy going to the (automotive) "stealerships," one huge advantage those techs have there is that they see (what, in the auto service biz) are called "pattern failures." IOW, repeated, typical failures that are associated either with a particular model or, in this case, a particular event (like a rollover). So, in such a case, where a general (non-BRAND-SPECIFIC-experienced) tech may do hours of seemingly-legitimate diagnostics, an (honest) dealer-trained tech can recognize a "pattern failure" MUCH more quickly (sometimes before it even goes on the lift), and thus, wind up being cheaper to fix than a guy who hasn't seen dozens of the same "pattern failures."
And since you replaced the rings, I have to ask--was there any type of "wear ring" or "carbon ring" in the bores?
And did you mic the cylinder bores, for roundness/excessive wear?
And did you hone the cylinders? I only ask because, IIRC, in gas engines, if new rings are installed without removing any carbon ring, by honing, you can end up with ring breakage, if the new rings are slamming into the carbon ring left in the "unswept" area of the bore, above where the old (worn) rings no longer "swept."
You stated:
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
While you've certainly been busy--and I hope all your hard work pays off--my advice would be to get this to a franchised Kubota dealer that you can TRUST, and have them do some basic diagnostics, starting with a compression check, to either confirm/deny the possibility of a bent rod. They (or you, given your skills) could perhaps simply replace the bent rod (if that can be done individually--if not, then all the rods) and you could be on your way (assuming wrist pins/bores, etc..., are not excessively-worn).
Oh--except for the weird fuel-dumping issue:
Was it running on three cylinders or four, either time, after you reassembled it?
Because if it's only running on three cylinders (and assuming the non-running cylinder had the plugged injector, AND ASSUMING the injector that was "stuck closed" was only INTERMITTENTLY not functioning) couldn't the non-running cylinder, NOW with a fuel-flowinginjector, cause unburned fuel to "puke" out the exhaust and drain into the oil pan?
And it's a mysterious coincidence that the tractor was running on four cylinders before it rolled over, and then developed a "stuck closed" injector, coincidentally, at the same time.... (Unless, in the process of hydro-locking, the extreme pressures also bent the injector pintle/otherwise damaged the injector?)
Again, an experienced Kubota tech should know what that's all about, IMO. They might even have a "known-good" injection pump they could hang on it, temporarily, for diagnostic purposes, and later, possibly, sell you, if that was the problem.
Best of luck!
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