Sorry for my stupid question, I'm still a newbie after all.
I noticed, especially with the snow plow, when I park the tractor in the garage and lower the boom down and set the plow down...after a few times of not using the tractor..well so far it's been a week the end of the boom, where the pins are toward the SSQA plate is will be almost resting on the floor and the plow will be curled up.
Is this pretty normal after a week of not using it? I tried looking it up and a few say yes and others say no something is wrong somewhere as they shouldn't move at all. But I was always told all hydraulic cylinders eventually lose pressure from sitting long enough.
Sometimes I will try to angle the plow down so its tilted forward (dump) and then set it on the floor that way which seems to kinda "pinch" the geometry of the loader and it seems to stay that way much longer.
But I was just curious what others thought...is it pretty normal? I don't see anything leaking. Everything is dry as a bone except for the pins of course lol.
I noticed, especially with the snow plow, when I park the tractor in the garage and lower the boom down and set the plow down...after a few times of not using the tractor..well so far it's been a week the end of the boom, where the pins are toward the SSQA plate is will be almost resting on the floor and the plow will be curled up.
Is this pretty normal after a week of not using it? I tried looking it up and a few say yes and others say no something is wrong somewhere as they shouldn't move at all. But I was always told all hydraulic cylinders eventually lose pressure from sitting long enough.
Sometimes I will try to angle the plow down so its tilted forward (dump) and then set it on the floor that way which seems to kinda "pinch" the geometry of the loader and it seems to stay that way much longer.
But I was just curious what others thought...is it pretty normal? I don't see anything leaking. Everything is dry as a bone except for the pins of course lol.