Chilly807
Elite Member
Mine was an option, installed as RFB describes.
Sean
Sean
Also check your manual as I believe you should be starting at 1/4 throttle or better.
I dropped my tractor off at the dealer. They said the relay to the glow plug wasn't sending power to them.
That's great you got the problem taken care of. Let us know when you get a couple cold starts if all is well.
Kubotafan;36794 When I bought the first one in 2002 I asked about a block heater and they told me I wouldn't need one. They said if the tractor wouldn't start in cold weather said:A good example why taking what a dealer says as gospel is not the best advice.:thumbdown:
A good example why taking what a dealer says as gospel is not the best advice.:thumbdown:
They told me the same thing at Nova, and it's true, I doubt it would fail to start in the temps we get. I use it to be easier on the engine and for shorter warm up time.
Sean
I am not saying there may not be benefits to having a block heater, but in over 10 years of experience starting various Kubota tractors in all sorts of winter weather a block heater wasn't needed to get the tractors started. I have found my dealer and service manager to be very helpful, and feel I can put trust in what they tell me. When I bought the L3540 I had a block heater put on it and also my B3030, but neither one has been used. It was mainly for my own piece of mind in knowing it was there to use if I thought it might be needed.
Just because it will start does not mean it is the best for your machine. We get temps here that I guarantee your diesel would not start. I just make a habit of plugging in when it gets below freezing.
Where in Canada are you?
I agree that having the engine oil and antifreeze warmer when starting is helpful for the long term use of the tractor. The point was that it should start without using a block heater. When I hear of Kubota tractors not starting when temperatures are close to freezing, I figure there is something wrong. It may be fuel gelling or glow plugs not heating, or some other problem.
In cold weather I always let my hydraulics warm up before I start using the tractor.
I disagree, before shutting down my machine, I set the RPM's at around 1200.Might be a glow plug issue... or just reluctant in cold weather. I'd like to see cranking speed a tad higher, but I kept expecting it to fire, so it's not obviously slow. I think an hour with a block heater would have done the trick. Throttle position should make no difference, the governor is calling for max fuel on start-up anyway. Once it fires, advancing the throttle will give smoother running however.
Sean