Oil pan bolt torque

   / Oil pan bolt torque #1  

jcc320

Bronze Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2017
Messages
54
Location
Crowley, la
Tractor
kubota L3430, L4060 TL
I need to change the oil pan on my l3430, would anyone know what the torque specs are for the bolts ? I am finding the chart kind of confusing. Also what does everyone torque the drain plug at ? I didn't realize the oil pan was aluminum and stripped the threads on the drain plug with too much torque.
Thanks
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #2  
A tad more than finger tight or as soon as it is snug. Does not needed to be torqued
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #3  
The oil pan bolts are typically torqued by bolt size. The chart below has what you need. I'm guessing they are 6.5 ..... 8.8 max. Typically the little oil pan bolts would need an inch pound torque wrench.

8.8 metric bolt torque chart - conttrapacbu23's soup

The drain plug is tightened just enough to crush the crush washer or rubber seal. I hold the wrench as close to the bolt head as possible and use mostly my wrist. It's about the same as a spark plug in an aluminum head- 15-25 ft/lbs. It doesn't take much. The book would have you change the washer/seal with every change. It's hardly ever done though
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #4  
I need to change the oil pan on my l3430, would anyone know what the torque specs are for the bolts ? I am finding the chart kind of confusing. Also what does everyone torque the drain plug at ? I didn't realize the oil pan was aluminum and stripped the threads on the drain plug with too much torque.
Thanks
For 8mm bolts the torque is 20 ft lbs
If they are 10mm, which I don't think they are, the torque would be 40 ft lbs.
This is the bolt diameter not the head size.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque
  • Thread Starter
#5  
The oil pan bolts are typically torqued by bolt size. The chart below has what you need. I'm guessing they are 6.5 ..... 8.8 max. Typically the little oil pan bolts would need an inch pound torque wrench.

8.8 metric bolt torque chart - conttrapacbu23's soup

The drain plug is tightened just enough to crush the crush washer or rubber seal. I hold the wrench as close to the bolt head as possible and use mostly my wrist. It's about the same as a spark plug in an aluminum head- 15-25 ft/lbs. It doesn't take much. The book would have you change the washer/seal with every change. It's hardly ever done though

Thanks for the info, so in the manual it lists a 14mm type 7 bolt should be tightened at 91.2 to 108 ft-lbs which doesn't seem close to right, so I was trying to figure out what I am misunderstanding. I tested the bolts that were still on the oil pan with a torque wrench to figure out that torque they are at before removing them and they seem to be around 35 ft-lbs.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #6  
I haven't worked on that motor but 10mm or even 8mm bolts seem huge. 10mm is like 3/8". I was thinking they were small- like 4-6mm. Again as noted above this is bolt diameter and not the head cross section.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #7  
I haven't worked on that motor but 10mm or even 8mm bolts seem huge. 10mm is like 3/8". I was thinking they were small- like 4-6mm. Again as noted above this is bolt diameter and not the head cross section.
B-series tractors have 6mm bolts, I expect his L-series has 8mm bolts, the old L-series had 10mm bolts and cast iron oil pans. Oh and I've been working on Kubotas for 30 years, I'm just too lazy to look up the bolt diameter in the parts book.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #8  
Grab your 3/8 ratchet and run it in snug.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #9  
Bigger than I expected- skip the inch pounds torque wrench if that's the case.
 
   / Oil pan bolt torque #10  
I would worry about using the torque specs. because of the lubrication on the threads. I would fear it would get to tight. But maybe that is flawed logic.

I was going to use a torque wrench on my chainsaw bar nuts but after beginning the process I stopped because it seemed way to tight already and still no clicky clicky.

I would use a small box end wrench and push with one hand with about the pressure you would use pushing a full grocery cart of beer. Hate to have it fall out and really hate to strip the threads. In other words a little finesse is involved.
 
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