New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot

   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #31  
It sounds normal and the black smoke is normal.

Take it out and break it in right by loading it down and using it, get it hot and flog it. Make sure it grenades before the warranty is up.

What's up with the steering wheel? Are you considering using the horn button for propane injection?:thumbsup:
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot
  • Thread Starter
#32  
Lol, funny you should mention propane, I converted my G5500 garden tractor 3 years ago! A lot less smoke on startup with propane, although currently running on gas since they were giving it away there for a while.

I popped the logo off the wheel cause they put the wheel on crooked on assembly, and I told myself I did not want to look at a crooked logo for 20 years. Popping off the wheel is "on the list".



Good to know that's normal, they just puff a bit when cold it seems. I might try the 2 glow plug cycle trick from MIE, as the reverse key extra flow plug time really reduced initial startup smoke for me.

Looks like she's dirty and noisy. As long as she keeps going I guess I can live with that. Wish the range selector was easier to put in low range, but maybe that will also get better with break in. Currently have to do the clutch/forward/reverse pedal dance to get her to go.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #33  
Because the steering is hydraulic the wheel constantly moves around slowly in one direction. Best to leave it alone.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot
  • Thread Starter
#34  
Because the steering is hydraulic the wheel constantly moves around slowly in one direction. Best to leave it alone.

Good to know. I'll pop the badge back on and pretend I don't see it. Better than getting a worn steering box in the future I guess.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #35  
The "clanky" noise is due to the indirect injection of the diesel. The CK2610 utilizes the mechanical indirect injection system like the other Tier III Diesels. What sounds like "clanking" is actually caused by the combustion that takes place in the pre-combustion chamber in the engine head. Gives it that old "Diesel" sound as the fuel combusts in the pre-combustion chamber. They do quiet down some when they warm up, but still "ping".

Very interesting comment. Kioti seems to go out of their way to avoid revealing that the 2610 still has the old, low technology IDI combustion system while the ck 3510 and 4010, as well the larger series have all moved on to direct injection and common rail fuel systems. It is really a marketing slight of hand to label the dirty IDI and the clean 3510/4010 both as Eco Diesels (3510 &4010 are Eco CRDI).

Being an IDI, if in fact it is as Michigan Iron suggests, there is a tremendous heat loss through the prechamber insert and transfer portcompared to the DI siblings . This heat loss manifests itself as poor cold start and warm up characteristics and somewhat rattle like sounding combustion due to high rates of pressure rise in the combustion system. The old GM 6.2 l Diesel from thirty five years ago, and the early 6.9 Ford Diesels exemplify this sound.

The DI engines have a much better controlled combustion process, due at least in part to the very flexible common rail fuel system, which has full range timing control and pilot injection which can be optimized with ambient altitude and temperature conditions as well as engine temperature and speed / load .

The other interesting thing to point out is the oil change interval of the 2610 compared to the 3510/4010. The common rail direct injection engines have longer intervals because of the inherently cleaner combustion, and the fact that the prechamber designs of the IDI blow a stoichiometrically rich, sooty flameout of the prechamber and across the top of the piston, which impinges on the cylinder wall. The soot then goes across the ring face and into the oil, necessitating more frequent oil changes.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #36  
That is probably way above the pay grade of the average consumer that buys this class of equipment. How much are the payments, Does it have blue tooth and how big is the cupholder? Many people like my lady friend has no idea how many cylinders are under her hood,
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #37  
Being an IDI, if in fact it is as Michigan Iron suggests, there is a tremendous heat loss through the prechamber insert and transfer portcompared to the DI siblings . This heat loss manifests itself as poor cold start and warm up characteristics and somewhat rattle like sounding combustion due to high rates of pressure rise in the combustion system. The old GM 6.2 l Diesel from thirty five years ago, and the early 6.9 Ford Diesels exemplify this sound.

Well that’s somewhat disconcerting as those are not Diesel engines I hold in high regard. I purchased the Bobcat version of the 2610 not only to save money upfront, but also in costs down the road of 20 years of planned ownership. Time will tell I guess
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #38  
Well that’s somewhat disconcerting as those are not Diesel engines I hold in high regard. I purchased the Bobcat version of the 2610 not only to save money upfront, but also in costs down the road of 20 years of planned ownership. Time will tell I guess
Don’t get me wrong. IDI engine’s are cheaper to produce and can offer a long and reliable service life.. it’s just that they are low tech and not really competitive in some aspects because they just don’t have modern technology to address some issues that electronics have enabled Development Engineers to address.

The plus of all that is that they are simple and easy to maintain and repair. Attributes that are exactly what a large population of consumers want, and that have made the sub 25 hp segment popular, especially among a large percentage of participants in this forum.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #39  
WHAT, finn1, do you not understand? In 20 years when your computer controlled cleaner running engine is no longer supported by the manufacturer neither will the lower class, lower priced, fuel burning, shop stinking up smoking 65 year old technology Diesel engine of the 2610. The difference is the 2610 will still be running, stinking up the environment and the original poster's shop.

AND the original poster will have a garden that feeds him and his family and you'll be tilling your garden with a potato fork because the ECM or injectors went bad in your machine and you can't make it run.

You pays your money you takes your chances.

NO criticism intended.
 
   / New CK2610 : rough running/clanging engine, cold and hot #40  
WHAT, finn1, do you not understand? In 20 years when your computer controlled cleaner running engine is no longer supported by the manufacturer neither will the lower class, lower priced, fuel burning, shop stinking up smoking 65 year old technology Diesel engine of the 2610. The difference is the 2610 will still be running, stinking up the environment and the original poster's shop.

AND the original poster will have a garden that feeds him and his family and you'll be tilling your garden with a potato fork because the ECM or injectors went bad in your machine and you can't make it run.

You pays your money you takes your chances.

NO criticism intended.

I do understand where you are coming from, but those arguments are just replays of the rhetoric bantered about in the seventies as the automobile industry transitioned first to alternators to generators (sixties) then to simple electronic ignitions, and finally to completely integrated engine management and control systems. Most light truck Diesels have been electronically controlled since about 1994, and the transition in heavy trucks, large tractors, and construction equipment started shortly thereafter.

Like I said, the obsolete mechanical engines are still available in low power applications, which typically run sixty or so hours annually, so, if that’s what you want, go for it. No need to defend that personal choice. I imagine there re even a few engines above 25 hp that are using credits to prolong the market availability of the old technology, albeit I don’t know who those manufacturers are.

Change won’t make the world tilt on its axis, and you and I will probably be long departed in fifty years. I know I will be.

I struggled through the transition to electronics. Lots of twenty hour days, lots of mistakes, and lots of successes. Having the privilege of working on cutting edge technology for thirty some years is something I will personally cherish forever, the capabilities of electronics have truly revolutionalised the industry.
 

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