Turbys_1700
Elite Member
Run it and don't worry about it...
You have a good dealer trying to make things right...
You have a good dealer trying to make things right...
newer machines just tend to exhibit problems more so than older ones; once you get a new one settled down they'll tend to stay that way.
Tractor steering cylinder has been fixed. Now to wait for the Mahindra representative to call me and come and look at my tractor, and then hopefully listen to me as I tell him about all the too many problems I have had with my tractor.
A lot of the guys on here are more patient and kind than me. That's probably good for the world. :thumbsup:
I would ditch this problem machine. It's depreciating more and more every day. You've already taken the hit. Sell it for what you can, buy a Kubota (or whatever suits you) and don't look back.
I can't stand having equipment I can't count on. Even though I don't do this stuff for a living, I expect everything I have to be ready to run at any moment. Anything less gets dealt with. If I can't repair it, it goes. This is within your control. End the frustration. If Mahindra won't take it back, ditch it and tell everyone you know about your experience.
I appreciate all the 'testers' out there in TBN land. It keeps a cowardly Kubota owner like me advised on how good or bad the options are.
...You aren't going to get Toyota quality from a Kia.
Very true !!A financial hit only hurts once. It's soon forgotten. Buying and operating a machine that won't do what you want hurts every time you use it.
Far as Kubota, I have a simple 02' L3000 since new & it's been nothing but a tank & rock solid design. My dealer does sale both NH & Kubota and I went with a blue tractor this time and don't regret it. All companies have some made on a Monday. Good luck man.
Really does seem like a fueling issue, fuel starvation. If diagnostics seemed to point toward excess vacuum build-up in the tank (as in their issue with the fuel cap) then perhaps there is something in the tank that's ending up blocking the outlet? I know that I was struggling with what I can only figure was some sort of ice pellet issue in the tank of my NX: engine was running and then after a while it quit; I would start it and it would run a bit and then die; finally figured it wasn't getting fuel; popped off the line and blew back into the tank and felt something dislodge.
One could possibly put something on the fuel line to watch flow, but I think that it would be easier to just run fuel from a separate container. This assumes there's not a separate fuel pump (just the IP being responsible for pulling fuel from the tank). If there's a fuel pump then for sure it needs to be checked out.