G52000 temp gage

Smokeless

Member

Equipment
3901/Loader/Rear Blade/Box Blade/LP Mower/Pallet forks IH M,,Cub & sickle mower
Feb 5, 2018
237
9
18
Southern Illinois
Just wondering if anyone retrofitted a temp gage on G5200. If so I would be interested and appreciative for info. Thanks
 

cliffboyer

Active member

Equipment
L3301 w/LA525 loader, G5200 mower w/RC48 deck, Kawasaki 610 Mule, DR mower
Nov 30, 2017
240
48
28
Southern IL
Your factory one is in-op?

Would imagine adding aftermarket be easy. Could perhaps use factory sender?
 

Smokeless

Member

Equipment
3901/Loader/Rear Blade/Box Blade/LP Mower/Pallet forks IH M,,Cub & sickle mower
Feb 5, 2018
237
9
18
Southern Illinois
Your factory one is in-op?

Would imagine adding aftermarket be easy. Could perhaps use factory sender?
I suspect the factory gage is faulty, engine seems to run a little high, but I am not sure what is normal. Just inherited the machine. Believe I will drop by kubota dealer and price one. Thanks
 

BruceP

Well-known member

Equipment
G5200H
Aug 7, 2016
836
353
63
Richmond, Vermont, USA
I suspect the factory gage is faulty... I am not sure what is normal.
I actually have a G5200 with factory sender. There are 3 lines on it.
  • Below lower line is "COLD"
  • Above upper line is "HOT"
  • Everything in between is "NORMAL"
Perhaps this helps you understand what is 'normal' range.

Beware, the D600 engine is a little large for the radiator. Everything needs to be working at top efficiency to keep the engine cool.
  • Antifreeze (Proper mixture to be able to move heat)
  • engine cooling passageways (clean-- no rust)
  • waterpump (antifreeze flow)
  • radiator (clean-- no scale)
  • fan (airflow through radiator)
Any of the above can weaken the entire chain.

My G5200 used to climb above the upper line after mowing over an hour. (90F ambient air)

I did the following:
  1. cleaned the INSIDE of the cooling system
  2. changed leaking waterpump
  3. changed hoses
  4. removed radiator and used garden-hose to rinse inside in BOTH directions
  5. Fill/flush cooling system several times - distilled water until clear
  6. blow out with leaf-blower between flushes
Now, my temperature gauge goes above the upper line ONLY if the airflow thru the radiator is impeded. After shutting down and blowing the chaff from the airflow... the gauge is back to normal whilst running.
 

Smokeless

Member

Equipment
3901/Loader/Rear Blade/Box Blade/LP Mower/Pallet forks IH M,,Cub & sickle mower
Feb 5, 2018
237
9
18
Southern Illinois
I actually have a G5200 with factory sender. There are 3 lines on it.
  • Below lower line is "COLD"
  • Above upper line is "HOT"
  • Everything in between is "NORMAL"
Perhaps this helps you understand what is 'normal' range.

Beware, the D600 engine is a little large for the radiator. Everything needs to be working at top efficiency to keep the engine cool.
  • Antifreeze (Proper mixture to be able to move heat)
  • engine cooling passageways (clean-- no rust)
  • waterpump (antifreeze flow)
  • radiator (clean-- no scale)
  • fan (airflow through radiator)
Any of the above can weaken the entire chain.

My G5200 used to climb above the upper line after mowing over an hour. (90F ambient air)

I did the following:
  1. cleaned the INSIDE of the cooling system
  2. changed leaking waterpump
  3. changed hoses
  4. removed radiator and used garden-hose to rinse inside in BOTH directions
  5. Fill/flush cooling system several times - distilled water until clear
  6. blow out with leaf-blower between flushes
Now, my temperature gauge goes above the upper line ONLY if the airflow thru the radiator is impeded. After shutting down and blowing the chaff from the airflow... the gauge is back to normal whilst running.
Believe I will thoroughly clean and see where I am. Replacement gage avail, little over $300.00 I do not use the mower routinely, Dad bought t new in mid 80's, I just dont want it to be parted out and the engine is still strong.
 

Blue280z

Member

Equipment
BX25D
Jul 1, 2020
64
24
8
Canada
Run Evaporust in the cooling system for a week then flush: