Leaving Valve in Float for Long Time

RCW

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Probably a dumb question, but I have a habit of doing it, so I figured to ask what you guys thought.

When I park the tractor, I tend to put the valve in float to drop the FEL or snowblower, and leave it there.

Sometimes it'll sit for weeks in float.

Today I realized it was left that way since last use of the snowblower, which was November sometime...

Is it okay to leave it in the detent, or better back to the neutral position?

All works fine now, and always has. I know the biggest problem is water/corrosion mucking the detent end of the valve.

Just curious if I should change my habit, and why?
 

rjcorazza

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Uhmm. I guess leaving it in float could result in long term strain on the detent mechanism, but I really don’t know how it works mechanically.
My habit has always been to lower the loader, shut off the tractor, then relieve any pressure on all cylinders (lower, curl, etc). I don’t leave the stick in float.


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North Idaho Wolfman

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Is it okay to leave it in the detent, or better back to the neutral position?
It should be left in neutral, leaving it in detent will compress the detent spring and eventually it will quit working, not the end of the world you would just need to rebuild the detent.

Leaving it in detent is not going to make the water corrosion issue any more or less of a problem, but if it rusts up in that position, you will have a real heck of a time fixing it as the loader will be dead. ;)
 

RCW

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Thanks, guys.
RJ and Wolf man, figured as much. It does make sense.
One more bad habit to kick...damn, list is getting longer..just ask my wife ....[emoji12]


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twomany

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Don't worry about the detent springs. Spring technology/metallurgy is so far beyond that it is no longer an issue,

When was the last time you lifted you car or truck off the ground "to keep the springs from taking a set" ?

The other aspects apply when present. i.e corrosion etc.
 

Eldubya

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Don't worry about the detent springs. Spring technology/metallurgy is so far beyond that it is no longer an issue,

When was the last time you lifted you car or truck off the ground "to keep the springs from taking a set" ?

The other aspects apply when present. i.e corrosion etc.
Guess I'm a creature of habit. I still block up my 8000lb boat in the fall to take pressure off of the leaf-springs.
 

JeepinMaxx

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Don't worry about the detent springs. Spring technology/metallurgy is so far beyond that it is no longer an issue,
This! Think about the springs in firearms magazines - they are compressed years on end for some folks!
 

North Idaho Wolfman

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This! Think about the springs in firearms magazines - they are compressed years on end for some folks!
Are your firearms magazines subject to water, rust, corrosion, freezing, thawing. ;)
 

Bulldog

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Just look at it this way. The same effort it took to get in the habit of leaving it in float will work to stop the cycle. Make it part of your shut down procedure and doing it right will be second nature.
 

twomany

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Just look at it this way. The same effort it took to get in the habit of leaving it in float will work to stop the cycle. Make it part of your shut down procedure and doing it right will be second nature.
Hmmm... Doing it right?... 'Might be just a judgment call based on ignorance.
 

Bulldog

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Hmmm... Doing it right?... 'Might be just a judgment call based on ignorance.
Leaving it in float is the same as parking it with the bucket in the air. You're leaving it in a position where it could fall or shift. Might appear to be sitting flat when in fact it's resting on a rock. You could unknowingly stick your foot under the edge about the time when the rock kicks out and the bucket fall on your toe.


"Doing it right"

On any modern loader with electric controls even if left in float when you turn the key off it automatically goes to neutral position. So that is the right way.
 

nbryan

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Leaving it in float is the same as parking it with the bucket in the air. You're leaving it in a position where it could fall or shift. Might appear to be sitting flat when in fact it's resting on a rock. You could unknowingly stick your foot under the edge about the time when the rock kicks out and the bucket fall on your toe.


"Doing it right"

On any modern loader with electric controls even if left in float when you turn the key off it automatically goes to neutral position. So that is the right way.
This ^^^^^^^