I do a generous warm up all the time, the colder, the longer, esp below freezing. I just imagine (in the hydraulic system) a $1 "O" ring that is $300-400 in service deep into the tractor, and rock hard, failing in those conditions. I'll bet that there are at least a couple dozen of them in a tractor.
I let it run at fast idle until the temp gets to operation range.
sound advice. if you have access to the owners manual, it states warm up times according to ambient temps. basically 10-20 min according to winter start up temps in your area. once the water temp gauge reaches operating temp, you should be good to apply full load to tractor. best regardsThe manual states to let it warm up for five minutes, as a minimum. In cold weather it recommends over 20 minutes warm up.
I am pretty new at Kubota ownership. Just wondering, should you run the tractor for a certain amount of time to warm up the hydraulic fluids. Thanks
No Hyd temp guage on them to me is not wise on Kubotas part. Especially on HST machines it should come standard. At the very least a "overheat light" for the HST.It would be nice to have an hyd. oil temp guage. Engine coolant temp imo has little relationship with the hydaulics at warmup. I'm more concened with that "end" of the machine for possible expensive damage in my "o ring" scenario above.
If that was the criteria, I'm not sure I could ever drive mine.After a couple hours of scooping snow, my gauge is just barely into normal range. It will never get there at an idle if it is below about 10.
You need to cover your radiator opening; you can purchase a canvas at your dealer for a price, or you can make one from almost any material that is wind proof. Mine is made from a Bud Light 12 pack cardboard carrier, tie wrapped to the grill screen. It covers practically the entire opening, and the tractor has never overheated, but runs at optimum temp, but I'm in the "colder than Mars" zone
With the new tier iv engines they tell you to not idle very much!