Kubota L235

   / Kubota L235 #1  

koryaube

New member
Joined
May 17, 2009
Messages
11
Tractor
Kobota 2920
My Uncle has a L235 that has problems. He told me that I can have the tractor...but oil is getting into the radiator. I live in southern Louisiana so I doubt that the freeze plugs have come out. I was told that someone borrowed the tractor and ran it without coolant in the radiator. My question is should I pay to repair this tractor? I am guessing that it may be a cracked head. Does anyone know what the price of this repair may be?
 
   / Kubota L235 #2  
Kory,

See if you have a local dealer or tractor mechanic who can tell you for an hour or two of labor what is going on.


The L235 is a good tractor but it is getting old (early to mid 80s) and may not be worth the cost of rebuilding the engine.

At least then you can make an informed decision instead of thinking it willbe cehap and turns into a money pit.

Good luck!
 
   / Kubota L235 #3  
I had a 235 that I cracked a head on. Repair guy said if he could find a new head he could fix, but the cost, if found, was more than I had paid for the tractor. I now own a Yanmar, but always loved that Kubota.
 
   / Kubota L235
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Thanks for the post Yankee Clipper and Eagle Dude...I went by the Kubota dealer this morning requesting a WSM. After talking to one of the employees at the dealer he told me it was a cracked block. "Water in the oil...Cracked Head, Oil in the water...Cracked Block" He was very set on this...It could be nothing else. I know I may just be hoping for the best but could it just be the head gasket?
 
   / Kubota L235 #5  
There is a chance it could be a head gasket. There is a slim chance of it being a cracked block, unless it has frozen. I have seen a couple of cracked blocks on Kubotas before, but they had been frozen. Other than that, I have never seen a cracked block on one of these tractors.

I'm thinking that the head is probably cracked, but the only way to know for sure is to pull the head and check everything out. The last one of these engines that I replaced a head on was an L275 (very similar). I found a rebuilt head through a salvage yard for $700 and the gaskets were about $130. This was 2 years ago.

All it will cost to look at it is a couple of hours to take it apart. Once you get it apart, you can decide which way to go with it. If it was mine, I'd want to know for sure before giving up on it.

Keep us posted.

Mike
 
   / Kubota L235
  • Thread Starter
#6  
MikesTractor

Thanks for the reply...the little tractor is not frozen (it almost started last night). You are correct about giving up on the tractor. I will get the tractor to my shop next week and pull the head off. Any pointers would be greatly appreciated by yourself or any other members of this forum. I will post some pictures of the l235 and the progress.

Thanks again...I was about to pass on the project.
 
   / Kubota L235 #7  
I'm wondering about your oil in the water. I've seen water in the oil, from a cracked head or block. But I've never seen oil in the coolent. The coolent is pressureized, how would the oil get in? I can't see a block cracking through an oil passage. Blocks usualy crack fron overheating, and or cooling down to fast, [putting cold water in a stoped engine that has boiled over].
 
   / Kubota L235 #8  
I'm wondering about your oil in the water. I've seen water in the oil, from a cracked head or block. But I've never seen oil in the coolent. The coolent is pressureized, how would the oil get in? I can't see a block cracking through an oil passage. Blocks usualy crack fron overheating, and or cooling down to fast, [putting cold water in a stoped engine that has boiled over].

Oil is pressurized to about 60psi, while water is pressurized to about 15psi.
A head gasket or cracked head or cracked block can connect the oil with
the water. I have seen oily coolant, and cloudy oil. Both are possible.
Hopefully this problem is only a bad head gasket. If one can not be bought
new, they can be custom cut out of copper sheet.

I just saw an L235 at a winery last week....still being used to pull wagons
around. I would have guessed 1970s vintage....that is when most of the
Lxxx's were made. By the early/mid 80s, the Ls were moving to Lxxxx's.
 
   / Kubota L235 #9  
Kory: I sent You a pm with what might be Your answer
 
   / Kubota L235 #10  
if it has an oil cooler that is what is cracked if it was a head it would be blowing the water out and if it were a cracked block it would have water in the oil. if it wear cracked in the cylender it would blow the water out.
 

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