bmaverick
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2013
- Messages
- 5,525
- Location
- Beloit-WI
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM2610 ■YANMAR GURU■ EXTRAORDINAIRE
All the above links are bad now. What is the story on these Yanmar F395 tractors? Have an opportunity to purchase one with 1700miles, but want to know what I am getting into.
There is a joint venture or agreement with Yanmar and Kukje that began back in the 1960s. Today, Kukje is part of the TYM company. Thus, RK tractors are made from all 3 of these companies components.
In the 1960s and onwards, Kukje supplies Ag parts to Yanmar. Some time in the 1980s or 90s, Kukje was making their own tractors. They knew Yanmar engine reliability and with another agreement, Kukje started making Yanmar engines as 'legal' clones for Kukje machines.
These Kukje machines with clone Yanmar engines were sold new in the Korean market. Now used and exported much like the gray market machines do today. However, with a twist. Kukje did export these machines to other countries too. Places like Brazil have full manuals in Portuguese. Australia have them in British English, etc.
The quest is, where to get parts. hmmm. If the engines are clones, would a OE Yanmar part mate up and function just the same? That is a big guess.
That F395 with 1700 hours is still young. On my YM2610, I just rolled 1810 hours. Whether a 'legal' clone engine made by Yanmar engineering blueprints or a true Yanmar made in Japan, I would suppose both would be reliable.
As Aaron posted back in 2005, still use caution. Ask around about parts suppliers and a parts network for the machine. Then make the offer you feel is respectable based on that input.
Note, that even some of the Japan US domestic import machines no longer have parts support as they are 40+ years old (Satoh, Mitsubishi, Kubota, Isekie, Hinomoto, Shabarua, etc). HOWEVER, the Yanmar YM series is far different. The YM series is like a Ford 8N. Parts are still available and flowing in the supply chain GLOBALLY. All of the EU, Eastern EU, Australia, South America & North America have 10s of thousands of these YM series machines. And there are John Deere siblings of them too. Yanmar invented the 4WD tractors as a 1st in the industry. Next they did the same with the PowerShift. It caught John Deere's attention enough to work side-by-side with them.