MHarryE
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,972
- Location
- Northeastern Minnesota
- Tractor
- Kubota M7-171, M5-111, SVL75-2, RTV900XT & GR2120; CaseIH 1680 combine
My M7 was down for 18 days due to a leaking o-ring in the suspension - o-ring not serviced separately, odd size, needed to replace entire hose and expedited shipment took 18 days - did I ever say Kubota service sucks? So I swapped the baler to my L6060. Now the L6060 has plenty of power for a 14 x 18 square baker. I use the M7 because of comfort. About 20 bales and the tractor does a regen. I thought that was pretty odd because the PM was far from regen when I switched the gauge to PTO speed. So I bale a couple more hours and once again I am in regen. That is really odd as normally I’m about 25 - 30 hours between regens. So I keep on baking but knowing the engine speed for 540 rpm PTO, I switch the gauge to PM. It pops up a percent every 3 or 4 plunger strokes. I call the dealer to see if baling is not permitted with L6060. He assures me it is perfect for the job. It must be lack of maintenance. Change air cleaner and blow out radiator. I check my records, I changed air cleaner not long before. Radiator had very little chaff. So I finish up worried that my DPF is kaput. Now swap the tractor to raking and towing gravity boxes because harvest is here. Same tractor today reached 70% on the DPF at 23 hours since it was taken off the baler. Kubota finally sent a suspension hose so the M7 is back baling. It’s DPF gauge hardly climbs with a light task like baling. The only thing I can figure is when watching a non-emissions controlled JD 4620 bale, it put out a plume of smoke like an old steam locomotive with every plunger stroke. If that is happening inside my L6060, that is a lot of soot for the DPF to trap. Does anyone else have any experience with a varying load like this? At rated speed, my baler is 93 strokes per minute so that is a lot of smoke puffs.