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Kubota Front tine tillers

Official Kubota front-tine tiller parts

Kubota front-tine tillers save you lots of time when preparing your garden for planting. Rugged tines in Kubota front-tine tillers break up soil quickly and easily. When your Kubota front-tine tiller runs rough, find the repair parts you need to fix the engine at Sears PartsDirect.

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Front-Tine TillersDown Icon
Tiller - AT25 logo

Kubota AT25 tiller at25

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291 Parts

Frequently bought Kubota parts

Parts you might be looking for

Lawn & Garden Equipment Recoil Starter Handle 12681-6167-0

Knob

Part #12681-6167-0

Replaced by #31-904

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Manufacturer substitution
This part replaces 12681-6167-0. Substitute parts can look different from the original.
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Popular maintenance items for Front-Tine Tillers

Parts you might be looking for

Common repair parts for Kubota front-tine tillers

  • Air filter. The tiller's air filter removes contaminants from air before it reaches the engine, to help reduce engine wear and improve efficiency.
  • Carburetor. The carburetor mixes air with fuel in the proper proportion to produce a combustible gas. That gas/air mixture is pulled into the cylinder where the piston compresses it and the spark plug ignites it.
  • Clevis pin. The clevis pin is a shear pin that couples the tines to the rotating tine shaft. The clevis pin is designed to shear off if the tines hit a fixed object during cultivation to prevent damage to the engine and other tiller components.
  • Depth stake. The depth stake is a metal stake attached to the tiller near the tines. Raise or lower the depth stake to control the tilling depth.

Tips for improving tilling when using your Kubota front-tine tiller

Worn or damaged tines, broken tine shaft clevis pins, a worn drive belt, a faulty transmission, a problem with the clutch cable, improper depth-stake setting or bad soil conditions can cause a tiller to do a poor job turning the soil.

The soil must be moist enough that it forms a ball when you squeeze it in your hand, but dry enough that the ball falls apart when dropped. Check soil conditions and water the area that you're tilling if the ground is too dry. Let the ground dry out if soil is too wet.

Check the depth stake setting and adjust it for the type of soil you're cultivating. Lower the depth stake to till at a 1-inch depth when using the tiller on soil for the first time or when breaking up hard soil. Also use the 1-inch depth setting to break up sod for shallow cultivation. Raise the depth stake to till loose soil and for deep cultivation.

Check the condition of the tiller tines and replace worn or damaged tines.