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I saw that earlier, but didn't know that the glass was still intact.Notice the gauge in pic 24? I noticed the last time I was there that the needle is bent over. Glass is still good, but needle is bent. I found that odd.
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The problem with leaky cylinders on the backhoe is that a lot of the seals are below the level in the hydraulic tank. The oil keeps slowly seeping past the spools in the lever valves and drips out of the busted cylinder seals whether you use the hoe or not. Disconnecting the two main hoses going to the backhoe unit will stop that IF the QD fittings work as they should. In any case, put a pan underneath when you disconnect them. The backhoe connection are not the 'zero fluid loss' flat face couplers and oil will drip out even if the couplers eventually seal the hose.thanks, i ordered the SC a few minutes ago.
the second issue i have is some leaky cylinders on the backhoe. for this winter i'd like to disconnect the backhoe hoses and just use the front bucket for some snow removal. do i just disconnect the two main hoses and connect them together? Will i need to make up some jumper hoses or get some caps? i haven't had a chance to go look at that system yet, i'm sure it'll be fairly obvious once i go take a look.
Good to know that it is possible. Connecting the hoses on the vehicle side will also keep the circuit open and would prevent damage to the pump and/or high pressure hose in case the PTO is engaged accidentally.One can connect the two hoses for the hoe on the vehicle side. Its a bit if a wrestling match but doable. If i did it you can too and it’s simpler than building a coupler hose. (Much cheaper too)
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