I am a newbie to Kubota tractors. After running my newly acquired L2850 in 4WD for maybe 20 minutes on my hilly property, I parked and shut it down on the driveway and went inside my garage. I came out a few minutes later and was greeted by a hemorrhage of oil that leaked (erupted) from the front axle case.
The picture of the oil on the cardboard was taken a few minutes after discovery (more oil was under the cardboard). 
I obtained the Workshop manual (L2250-L2550, L2850) and the Illustrated Parts List. I took pictures of the oil leak to the local dealer who thinks the leak was caused by a failed oil seal (PN 31353-4387-0) between the Bevel Gear case and the Front Axle case. He sold me the Oil Seal Kit, an O ring, and a Plug. Funny he didn稚 say anything about the creamy appearance of the oil that leaked. It is supposed to be 80-90W gear oil. Some of it looked like gear oil but most of it looked like a lighter viscosity amber fluid?ome portion of the spill looked creamy?.like maybe water got inside the housing and mixed with the oil. Anyway?
It looks to me that the only way to remove and replace this oil seal is to separate the Bevel Gear case housing from the Front Axle case. According to the instructions and pictures in the Workshop manual on page S.6-12, that separation looks a bit scary for someone that hasn't done it before.
For those of you that have done this seal replacement (or knew enough not to attempt it), I need to know whether it is something that I can handle or is this best left to a trained specialist? The two steps that concern me most are (from the Workshop manual, page S.6-12):
4. Tap out the 12T bevel gear (6) and ball bearing, and
5. Draw out the bevel gear shaft (7)
How difficult is it to tap out the 12 T bevel gear and ball bearing race? The illustration shows the mechanic using what looks to be a long drift up against the gear being hammered by a large ball peen hammer?and the angle of the drift looks more like it is being used as a lever.
Any comments? Like,"all it takes is a few light taps and it all comes apart nice and easy?" or, "getting the gears out is tough but removing the snap rings is darn near impossible"
Step (5) says to draw out the shaft. How does one draw out the shaft? With the plug, retaining clip, and shim removed from the lower end of the axle case, does the bevel gear and ball bearing just slide off the end of the shaft and fall out the end of the case (after being hammered on)? Isn't the shaft is still engaged into the upper bevel gear housing. Is a tool required to grip and pull the bevel gear shaft out? What tool is recommended to avoid damaging the splines or marring the shaft? Should the shaft come out easily or are there circumstances where dealer only special tools and skills are required to get the shaft out? (yes, it has occurred to me, too, that I have been shafted
)
Since the axle case and bevel gear case come off as a unit, I am considering taking the whole works to the dealer as opposed to tearing into it myself. However, I have lots of automotive tools and can turn a pretty good wrench and I am on a very limited retiree budget. Straightforward opinions are invited. This fool is too old to rush in Thanks in advance.[/SIZE][/FONT]
I obtained the Workshop manual (L2250-L2550, L2850) and the Illustrated Parts List. I took pictures of the oil leak to the local dealer who thinks the leak was caused by a failed oil seal (PN 31353-4387-0) between the Bevel Gear case and the Front Axle case. He sold me the Oil Seal Kit, an O ring, and a Plug. Funny he didn稚 say anything about the creamy appearance of the oil that leaked. It is supposed to be 80-90W gear oil. Some of it looked like gear oil but most of it looked like a lighter viscosity amber fluid?ome portion of the spill looked creamy?.like maybe water got inside the housing and mixed with the oil. Anyway?
It looks to me that the only way to remove and replace this oil seal is to separate the Bevel Gear case housing from the Front Axle case. According to the instructions and pictures in the Workshop manual on page S.6-12, that separation looks a bit scary for someone that hasn't done it before.
For those of you that have done this seal replacement (or knew enough not to attempt it), I need to know whether it is something that I can handle or is this best left to a trained specialist? The two steps that concern me most are (from the Workshop manual, page S.6-12):
4. Tap out the 12T bevel gear (6) and ball bearing, and
5. Draw out the bevel gear shaft (7)
How difficult is it to tap out the 12 T bevel gear and ball bearing race? The illustration shows the mechanic using what looks to be a long drift up against the gear being hammered by a large ball peen hammer?and the angle of the drift looks more like it is being used as a lever.
Any comments? Like,"all it takes is a few light taps and it all comes apart nice and easy?" or, "getting the gears out is tough but removing the snap rings is darn near impossible"
Step (5) says to draw out the shaft. How does one draw out the shaft? With the plug, retaining clip, and shim removed from the lower end of the axle case, does the bevel gear and ball bearing just slide off the end of the shaft and fall out the end of the case (after being hammered on)? Isn't the shaft is still engaged into the upper bevel gear housing. Is a tool required to grip and pull the bevel gear shaft out? What tool is recommended to avoid damaging the splines or marring the shaft? Should the shaft come out easily or are there circumstances where dealer only special tools and skills are required to get the shaft out? (yes, it has occurred to me, too, that I have been shafted
Since the axle case and bevel gear case come off as a unit, I am considering taking the whole works to the dealer as opposed to tearing into it myself. However, I have lots of automotive tools and can turn a pretty good wrench and I am on a very limited retiree budget. Straightforward opinions are invited. This fool is too old to rush in Thanks in advance.[/SIZE][/FONT]