Well my opinion of Kubota took a further nose dive after talking with the factory rep, makes me wonder if they are following the chinese tractor model at Northern Tool, crank out some $%&^ with a one year warrantee and run, with the key exception of the price not being a good deal.
He told me he was really interested in seeing the transmission and helping me with my problem but that I needed to meet him at the dealer today. I drove 50 miles to bring the tranny in and he and the service manager met and agreed it was fried and it shouldn't have happened so early @ 500 hr. So he called me back later with a list of parts to replace, and an even bigger lists of excuses why he can't do anything.
The first was that I wasn't at the dealer I purchased it at which is only 800 miles from where I am now in NC. I asked him how that mattered and he couldn't tell me. Then it was that I had used the tractor in NY where it was cold and that can run down the tranny early in its lifespan. If HST's only last 500hr where its cold there's a problem. The next was that I did the work taking it apart so that makes it difficult to resolve. How? The HST is shot, I didn't round the pump bore by taking it apart? He then pointed to the zero turn mowers and said they have had a much higher failure rate and the BX's are only in the single digit % on early transmission failures so this is just an unfortunate dumb-luck fast-wearing one. That built some confidence. So if I want more peers to cry with buy a zero turn next time??
I wasn't looking for anything unrealistic, and even asked if they could at least just help with giving me a break on the cost of the parts. The answer was there is not anything he could do at all. He could have told me that before I wasted two hours and a long drive. PS, the HST costs almost 20% of the tractor's price new.
Well, I ordered the parts to do this myself, and will get it repaired, but I am not certain I will follow the orange path in the future. I was looking at an RTV over the next year but that is dead.