[Farmall] 340 Utility hydraulics
Jim Becker
jim.becker at verizon.net
Sun Aug 26 16:11:13 PDT 2012
I thought the 340 hydraulics used oil from the transmission. If so, you are
looking at 5 or 6 gallons for a change. Assuming that is so, I would pull
the transmission/differential drain plug and give the crud at least over
night to drain. Then do a partial refill, enough for the gears and
hydraulics to be able to pick it up, maybe a couple gallons will do it. Run
it around some to flush things and drain it again. Repeat until the oil
doesn't turn white. I would use genuine Hy-Tran as it will absorb more
moisture. Using something else will require more flushes.
Then you can start working on the hydraulics. Maybe clean oil will be all
the hydraulics needs. Otherwise, clean all the intakes, strainers, filter
etc. and see if that fixes it. If it doesn't, then you have real hydraulic
repairs to diagnose/fix. Once it is fixed, you will need to cycle the hitch
and whatever is attached. You will probably need to change the oil again
and top it off.
I hate to say it, but sometimes if maintenance is deferred long enough, you
need to catch up, not just pick up the schedule!
Jim Becker
-----Original Message-----
From: prjones
Sent: Sunday, August 26, 2012 5:22 PM
To: Farmall/IHC mailing list
Subject: [Farmall] 340 Utility hydraulics
I bought a 340 utility gas with non working hydraulics. I pulled the plate
for the filter and the oil was white. I know I have water in oil. What
should be my next step? I hate to drain it and put in 10 quarts of Hytran
and then have to do it again wasting the oil. any advice or test I can run?
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