New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D

   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #21  
WYdirt--any more pics and details of your great looking Yanmar?

Thank You, Here's my post with video & pictures http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/yanmar/377839-yanmar-240d-yoshi-pictures-video.html . I bought it a little over a week ago in northern UT. It was bought locally new & the guy I got it from bought it from a dealer/service shop that was closing down, he only had it about 6 months. He already had a 1510 (I think) that he tilled and mowed with and just sold this one. After digging into it, servicing it & cleaning it up, it is pretty easy to tell this tractor has had a very easy life. I have been looking for a tractor for a long time & patience finally paid off! I just could not see having a tractor payment & I want to be able to work on it myself.
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #22  
That's why we all have these yanmars!! You did good
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #23  
Are the Yanmars you see there the 'export' version sold by dealers representing Yanmar corporation, with English manuals and labels? What we see here now is some of those sold here originally before Yanmar abandoned the US market, but outnumbered by Japan-market versions imported used/clean condition in some cases, and often the condition of the used imports is 'reconditioned' in VN after what may have been a second lifetime of use there. Yanmar-US won't discuss or sell parts for anything but the English-language 'export' version Yanmars that they originally brought over.

After a fatal rollover of a VN recon some 10 years ago Yanmar-US sued all the gray market importers and drove most of them out of business. Fredricks is (I think) the sole exception, they already had an agreement with Yanmar to properly recondition and add US-spec safety gear on their recons so they were allowed to continue.

Yanmar returned to the US market recently and is now selling their current models here, again, after some 20 years absent.

How does this compare to what you see there?

I honestly can't say, Mate. The only old YANMAR around here that I know of belongs to a Mate of mine in town. It is one tiny tractor but seems to go on forever. :)
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #24  
Yanmar returned to the US market recently and is now selling their current models here, again, after some 20 years absent.

How does this compare to what you see there?

Yanmar Excavators yes, tractors no. The excavators are extremely popular here but have never seen a new tractor. That may change now once they re-establish a market in the US again and it should flow on "down" here.
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #26  
Not that I've seen or heard. The market here is small enough as it is that even Chinese grey's have difficulties getting a toehold.

If there's a VN 'rebuilt' market on this side of the world I'd look local SE Asia or Africa.
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #27  
Do you guys get the VN 'rebuilts' then?

When I bought mine about 8 years ago there was a few suppliers of VN refurbs around stocking several models and brands. Now they are very scarce. We don't see refurbed excavators only tractors but even they are rare now. I was doing some googling and snooping around a few weeks ago and found numerous refurbed Iseki's advertised. Don't know where they came from. Mine has LCI belts and hoses on it so I can only assume that's where mine came from as the tractor seller I bought off is no longer around. The only problem I have had with mine was a collapsed wheel bearing in the front as they were assembled dry and it seized up.
 
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   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D
  • Thread Starter
#28  
I got the fuel gauge working and dug into the UFO controls. There are a few clipped wires on the circuit board (it's a two layerd circuit board about 2.5"x9") and it looks like the previous owner wired the lift joystick directly to the lift solenoids. I'll just forget about getting the UFO controls to work. Everything else works and the diesel engine purrs and sips fuel like the other yanmar engines I've had in equipment.

I went to eat at a Japanese steakhouse and took my UFO pictures in, but guess what? The owners are Chinese :) But they were able to decipher some of the symbols because of similarities. But like I said, I'm not going to explore anymore.

Now I just need to sort out the loader float function. The loader stays put when I detent it into float and if I leave it in float and raise the 3pt arms all the way up, as soon as the arms are all the way up and I keep holding the raise switch the loader starts raising. I imagine the loader was working properly when it was first installed by whomever, so maybe an o-ring busted internally or something is blocking a port??? I'm going to do another test this evening and disconnect the 'out' hyd hose then moved the joystick to float and see if the loader settles.
 
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D
  • Thread Starter
#29  
   / New owner of a model on the 'Models to Avoid' list - Yanmar FX235D #30  
if I leave it in float and raise the 3pt arms all the way up, as soon as the arms are all the way up and I keep holding the raise switch the loader starts raising.
This is normal.

The pump is positive-displacement so fluid passes through the lines continually. The loader control is in series ahead of the 3-point. The loader lift circuits are normally closed off, isolated, from that valve's pass-through line when you aren't touching the handle. But in 'float' there is a route for fluid to get to the lift cylinders.

Then back at the 3-point, that valve is normally pass-through also. But when you move that lever to 'lift' fluid can't drain to the tank, it is all routed to the 3-point lift cylinder. When the 3-point arms reach maximum is the first time the loader control sees back-pressure. So at that time, high pressure is routed to the loader's cylinders, and they raise.
 

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