prof fate
Platinum Member
- Joined
- May 30, 2018
- Messages
- 684
- Location
- beaver pa
- Tractor
- kioti ck3510 Cub Cadet 149, 2146, Toro Zero Turn
last year was my first year with a diesel and I did a lot of research...
Diesel has wax and oil in it - the winter blend has less - home heating oil will work as fuel, it has no wax/oil in it. The injection system needs lubrication so running heating oil year round isn't a good idea.
Additives...I used them on my old kubota. The new kioti manual recommends DO NOT used additivies. I assume DPF filters are the concern with addititives.
Heating the engine oil or block makes the engine crank easier/faster when super cold. Should help with warm up.
My old kubota (early 70s) and 2018 kioti both say to warm up 10-15 minutes BEFORE using AT ALL. The old kubota..did what I was told as a mechanic - you got oil pressure you're good to go. Warms up faster when working than idling, so you're better off to work lightly till it warms up.
But that was a geared tractor..the new one is HST and I'm noticing a very large performance deficit till things warm up...and it's only in the low 30s here so far.
I have a propane turbo heater and my plan is to run that on the crankcase/underbelly when it gets really cold if it becomes an issue.
tractor had no block heater and dealer said nobody here gets one and it's not an issue. (western PA) Last year the kubota (1400 hours, 45 years old, 7 year old battery) started every time, even in -4 temps. On ONE glowplug (2 cyl diesel).
Diesel has wax and oil in it - the winter blend has less - home heating oil will work as fuel, it has no wax/oil in it. The injection system needs lubrication so running heating oil year round isn't a good idea.
Additives...I used them on my old kubota. The new kioti manual recommends DO NOT used additivies. I assume DPF filters are the concern with addititives.
Heating the engine oil or block makes the engine crank easier/faster when super cold. Should help with warm up.
My old kubota (early 70s) and 2018 kioti both say to warm up 10-15 minutes BEFORE using AT ALL. The old kubota..did what I was told as a mechanic - you got oil pressure you're good to go. Warms up faster when working than idling, so you're better off to work lightly till it warms up.
But that was a geared tractor..the new one is HST and I'm noticing a very large performance deficit till things warm up...and it's only in the low 30s here so far.
I have a propane turbo heater and my plan is to run that on the crankcase/underbelly when it gets really cold if it becomes an issue.
tractor had no block heater and dealer said nobody here gets one and it's not an issue. (western PA) Last year the kubota (1400 hours, 45 years old, 7 year old battery) started every time, even in -4 temps. On ONE glowplug (2 cyl diesel).