[AT] Hydraulic hoses

Will Powell william.neff.powell at comcast.net
Thu Aug 13 04:42:23 PDT 2009


I'm with Mike... 

I have an old Mcconnell 3pt Back hoe that will not allow movement unless the system is under pressure, a nice safety feature. Though, I do leave it up, but perhaps I will lower it to the ground to relieve the load, makes sense. 

I was over at my neighbors house and his son was playing on his back hoe and dropped the bucket, "boom".... Thankfully nobody was under it. I was amazed that it could happen because my 1960's backhoe would never let that happen..... I told my neighbor that maybe he should drop the bucket when he was finished with it.... 

Regards, 

Will 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mike Sloane" <mikesloane at verizon.net> 
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com> 
Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 7:20:58 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [AT] Hydraulic hoses 

Not to lecture, but the instructions for virtually all hydraulic 
equipment state, when done with the machine even for only a few minutes, 
to lower everything to the ground and relieve the pressure on all valves 
by cycling them. There are two issues here: 1. safety - a raised boom or 
other tool can drop very quickly if someone accidentally moves a lever 
or a hose fails, and it could fall on someone in the area, and 2. 
leaving pressure on the system when idle puts a strain on the system and 
can cause premature wear (especially old hoses). Also, kids love to play 
on idle machines and love working all the levers. 

Just my 2 cents, 

Mike 

David Bruce wrote: 
> This topic is timely for me as I have one connection to the control 
> valves on my loader on the JD 2010 that has seeped a bit of hydraulic 
> oil with use since the hoses were replaced. The other day I picked up a 
> tube of the paste rated for use in hydraulic systems - now to remember 
> to give it a try. The seepage is small and eventually is enough to 
> allow the bucket to drop to the ground it left in a lifted position when 
> the tractor is stopped - talking a couple weeks here so it really is a 
> seep rather than a leak. 
> 
> David 
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