MChalkley
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2000
- Messages
- 3,198
- Location
- Eastern Virginia
- Tractor
- EarthForce EF-5 mini-TLB (2001)
Tinmann - Amsoil recommends ATH (the part number for 5-gallon pails is, unimaginatively, ATH-05) for Kubota and JD HST's (as well as GST's, etc.), but the ISO 46 stuff Gary mentions works fine, too. It's more expensive, and is the newer product, and supposedly has additional anti-wear properties. I haven't used anything but ATH, myself, and probably won't. It's so much better than petroleum, from my experience, that I can't see there being a practical performance advantage to going with even more expensive oil in a tractor. And I consider myself a bit fanatical about this kind of thing. But I say: If somebody wants to be even more fanatical than I am, more power to 'em. It won't be easy or cheap to accomplish, though. /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif
As I've documented before on this board and the previous one, I've observed (and measured) much lower temperatures under extreme load after switching to synthetic (somewhere here there's a post with the exact numbers), as well as much better performance in extreme cold. As Larry said (thanks, Larry!) these factors add up to more than just numbers - they translate to less wear and tear on your equipment - and that translates to money. Additionally, the better performance of synthetic creates a safety net, or insurance, if you prefer, against damaging your equipment if you push it to its limits regularly, as I do.
Both purchasers of the previous tractors I traded in switched them back to Kubota Super UDT, then back again to Amsoil when they noticed the drop in performance, the increase in noice, etc. And neither of them had ever used synthetics before. That should tell you something.
MarkC
As I've documented before on this board and the previous one, I've observed (and measured) much lower temperatures under extreme load after switching to synthetic (somewhere here there's a post with the exact numbers), as well as much better performance in extreme cold. As Larry said (thanks, Larry!) these factors add up to more than just numbers - they translate to less wear and tear on your equipment - and that translates to money. Additionally, the better performance of synthetic creates a safety net, or insurance, if you prefer, against damaging your equipment if you push it to its limits regularly, as I do.
Both purchasers of the previous tractors I traded in switched them back to Kubota Super UDT, then back again to Amsoil when they noticed the drop in performance, the increase in noice, etc. And neither of them had ever used synthetics before. That should tell you something.
MarkC
