FEL has no power. Barely will come off the ground at WOP. I did check the pressure at the rear remote port its showing 2000 psi. Can someone help me with further troubleshooting my issue?
Is it possible, after the hose blew, that you removed more than one hose from the loader valve?It blew the hose coming from the pump to the FEL control valve. Changed the hose and has not been the same since. Changed the hose again thinking it may had been restricted or faulty. Still the same. Checked all the cylinders to ensure none were bypassing internally. Lead myself to believe it could be the the control valve itself. Ordered a new one. Installed it. Still the same. Adjusted the relief on the loader valve. No change there. It has a single rear remote. It is not partially on. Lift arms work but are weak as well. Engine needs to idled up to lift the arms.
The following are from the FEL WSMFilters and oil was changed at the same time I changed the loader valve. Not even an hour since. Only been running while trying to fix this thing. Hoses are not swapped to the best of my knowledge. 3 pnt was all in working condition. Is there a plumbing diagram available anywhere?
Do you have a self leveling loader as it has a different valve?Thanks dave but this doesn***8217;t appear to be the same valve bank I have.
I'll almost bet that the hoses from the pump to the loader valve are installed wrong causing the pump to be deadheaded. This is what caused the hose to blow and likely has now damaged the pump. This is very easy to do unfortunately, and isn't readily apparent, I did it one myself on a new tractor. The tractor worked good for a few weeks until the owner actually stressed it by running it all the way to the top. see attached page from assembly manualFEL has no power. Barely will come off the ground at WOP. I did check the pressure at the rear remote port its showing 2000 psi. Can someone help me with further troubleshooting my issue?
And this oneI'll almost bet that the hoses from the pump to the loader valve are installed wrong causing the pump to be deadheaded. This is what caused the hose to blow and likely has now damaged the pump. This is very easy to do unfortunately, and isn't readily apparent, I did it one myself on a new tractor. The tractor worked good for a few weeks until the owner actually stressed it by running it all the way to the top. see attached page from assembly manual
I can send you the complete assembly manual if you PM me an email addressThanks I will check it out and let you know the outcome.
good! Then you need a flow/ pressure test on that pump. ( or just buy a new one and try it)All the hoses are correct. Machine was operating properly. The hose blew. Hose was replaced. Has been the same since.
eserygood! ( or just buy a new one and try it)
I certainly agree that the pump should be properly tested rather than just replaced. But I doubt the owner is in possession of a flow-meter to test it with. He has already replaced the loader control valve which contains the relief valve so that almost eliminates the relief valve from being the problem. The symptoms are typical of a failed pump so if the customer is not wanting to take it to a mechanic for proper diagnosis then pump replacement is the other option. If the pump IS the problem he will have saved himself a few hundred dollars . I would never just replace a pump in the shop but from a customer perspective it is a little different situation.esery
May I ask what you're suggesting to replace?
Back when I served as a dealer service manager I was taught one should perform "good diagnostic's" before replacing any parts. My guess is a relief valve isn't seated correctly.
Thanks,Jim