Hello
Today it was 12 degrees and I fired up the l series to push some snow and the hydraulics were not working. I got the tractor to move about 30 feet and the bucket up about 6 inches and that was all she wrote. I fear that there may water in the hydraulic system freezing in the orifices. The level is fine.
Question 1: how can I diagnose whether its a water issue or something else?
A little relevant background: Last year I poured some hydraulic fluid in that seemed a little thin and once I saw that first thick glob goop out I knew exactly what happened. I moved the tractor about 30 feet to get to level solid ground and drained the system and left it unplugged overnight. Then I added therotella back in. With the understanding that this oil absorbs up to 1% its volume in water I called it good and ran it that way for the rest of the season.
If indeed I have water in there, is this enough? Should I flush, fill, run and flush a second time? And if so, is there something more cost effective thanT4 oil to do the middle step?
EDIT: I meant to say Kubota Hydraulic Oil not Rotella.
Thanks in advance
Hany
Today it was 12 degrees and I fired up the l series to push some snow and the hydraulics were not working. I got the tractor to move about 30 feet and the bucket up about 6 inches and that was all she wrote. I fear that there may water in the hydraulic system freezing in the orifices. The level is fine.
Question 1: how can I diagnose whether its a water issue or something else?
A little relevant background: Last year I poured some hydraulic fluid in that seemed a little thin and once I saw that first thick glob goop out I knew exactly what happened. I moved the tractor about 30 feet to get to level solid ground and drained the system and left it unplugged overnight. Then I added the
If indeed I have water in there, is this enough? Should I flush, fill, run and flush a second time? And if so, is there something more cost effective than
EDIT: I meant to say Kubota Hydraulic Oil not Rotella.
Thanks in advance
Hany
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