RayfromTX
Silver Member
I recently bought a 4140h. When I got it home it had 5 hours on the clock. At 25 hours it went into regen which was disappointing but I figured it made sense because on the lot it was started twice a day to move it in and out of the warehouse. It sat on the lot for a couple months so I decided I would just see if it was longer until the next regen.
I start it and warm it for about 5 minutes at 1500 rpm. I operate it in the 2k to 2,400 rpm range. I cool it down in the 1200 rpm range for a few minutes as I put it away. I have been working it hard for several hours at a time. 18 hours later at 43.5 hours it went into it's second regen. For a machine that is estimated and reported here to go about 50 hours between regen cycles this seems off, especially considering how I am using it.
Does anybody have any ideas why this may be occurring or similar experiences? Should I bring this to the dealer's attention? They may say it's not hours that causes it but 70 percent on the canister, which is true buuuuuut, why am I not getting close to the estimate? Is this an indication of something that shouldn't be ignored?
I start it and warm it for about 5 minutes at 1500 rpm. I operate it in the 2k to 2,400 rpm range. I cool it down in the 1200 rpm range for a few minutes as I put it away. I have been working it hard for several hours at a time. 18 hours later at 43.5 hours it went into it's second regen. For a machine that is estimated and reported here to go about 50 hours between regen cycles this seems off, especially considering how I am using it.
Does anybody have any ideas why this may be occurring or similar experiences? Should I bring this to the dealer's attention? They may say it's not hours that causes it but 70 percent on the canister, which is true buuuuuut, why am I not getting close to the estimate? Is this an indication of something that shouldn't be ignored?