[QUOTE=RedNeckGeek;
How many hours do you have on your RTV-900 and were you the original owner?
I have an RTV-400, the smaller gas model and I'm interested in what you find about your splines.
Did any bolts come loose to cause this?
Your model is entirely different than mine, diesel and hydro vs gas and cvt. But the splines might not be
much different...
I'd definitely do them both if you have a higher hour machine.
Just got mine back from Kubota dealer, in one day and back the next. Does not like starting in cold weather without
synthetic oil which I always specify. Kubota has been a very late adopter it seems to synthetic oil.
After almost five years I have about 200 hours on mine. If I didn't have a golf cart I'd use it a lot more to get around.
Single cylinder EFI Subaru engine. Much larger one in my Outback...
Heavy duty rubber belted CVT. All of which is too strange for me to work on. Only piece of equipment I own where I can't
figure out the mechanical layout, due to shrouding and very odd single boxer layout. I could be looking at a piece of alien
machinery and have an easier time. Compared to the other 20+ small engines I own, and work on constantly, the RTV's powertrain
is so strange I just leave it the dealer. Two hundred bucks every two years
Hmmm. Now the numbers part of my brain starts calculating, thanks to good coffee...100 hours divided by 200 dollars means it costs me
2 dollars an hour for maintenance. A bit high...but to maintain a $9k UTV, which I can't figure out, well ok. Sure runs nicely, and for heading across to my neighbor's across the muddy field,
fits the bill. Just wish Kubota put better seats in their machinery. Ones in my UTV are crummy, basically pads and no back support. Not a real seat.
Gators are much better in this regard, have a bucket seat layout vs bench seat.
Am now headed to seedling room to replant some cippolini onions. Lots of blank holes, not very good germination. Tiny, tiny seeds, maybe I planted the
husks by mistake...
If at first you don't succeed, try, try again.
Warmest room in the house and fun to sit in there, have a chair near a heavy oak table that was in there and I worked around, too heavy to move. So I do my labels while the warm somewhat more humid air feels good and overall planting and rebirth just makes me feel good. Other onions, Red Creole and some shallots are going gangbusters, two inches tall already. They get planted in March. Everything is so much earlier here than I'm used to, not only being way further South but also being by the coast which moderates the weather a bit.
Meanwhile I mentally envision the rows, all those little pak choys popping up.
Helps to offset the cold weather that has returned.
Need to go, get to my onions, besides I clog this thread up too much as it is.