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How could back dragging bend the cylinder ram rod and not bend the supporting brackets first? Been on a farm for over 30 years and have never seen a bent cylinder rod before.More then likely you used the bucket to back drag and tipped the bucket to far forward. When back dragging always keep the cutting edge pointed away from the tractor. In other words do not extend the bucket 100% and then back drag.
Another cause of a bent cylinder is something getting caught between the cylinder and the loader boomHow could back dragging bend the cylinder ram rod and not bend the supporting brackets first? Been on a farm for over 30 years and have never seen a bent cylinder rod before.
Something is not engineered correctly in my opinion.
The rod bends first because it "It is the weakest link."How could back dragging bend the cylinder ram rod and not bend the supporting brackets first? Been on a farm for over 30 years and have never seen a bent cylinder rod before.
Something is not engineered correctly in my opinion.
Without any context yes this is the most common issue. OP when you fully curl the bucket out (or down) all the way, the maximum length of the hydraulic cylinders are exposed. This puts the overall cylinder in its weakest position to withstand strain. Most of the time you hit a stump, rock or something that jars against the bucket and bends that cylinder in its exposed position.More then likely you used the bucket to back drag and tipped the bucket to far forward. When back dragging always keep the cutting edge pointed away from the tractor. In other words do not extend the bucket 100% and then back drag.
The rod bends first because it "It is the weakest link."
With the bucket dumped at 100% the edge is pointed toward the ground enough that it will catch a root or rock or something else and put a shock load on the cylinders. Even in the float mode the cylinders are prone to damage. It takes just an instant for the bucket to catch and bend the rods.If you're back dragging with the bucket angled all the way down and the cylinder rods fully extended, would setting the loader in float mode be a good idea, assuming that you don't need a lot of downforce other than the weight of the bucket and loader?
Thanksla555? I notice the cylinder caps look different than the ones on my 2017 model. I would file a KTAC claim. That cylinder is probably more than $1200. I would also check to make sure the other side is not bent as well. Like others have said, more than likely you back dragged too far with it.
I was not Back Dragging anything. I was slopping a ditch from the bottom side going up. Approaching the bottom of the ditch from the side that was already slanted. I was doing this to make it so I could mow it versus using a weed whacher.Without any context yes this is the most common issue. OP when you fully curl the bucket out (or down) all the way, the maximum length of the hydraulic cylinders are exposed. This puts the overall cylinder in its weakest position to withstand strain. Most of the time you hit a stump, rock or something that jars against the bucket and bends that cylinder in its exposed position.
@spf58 do you recall doing any of this type of work and if so hitting anything hard with the bucket in this position?
Sorry I might not be fully grasping this, was the bucket curled out and then maybe you pushed into the slope?I was not Back Dragging anything. I was slopping a ditch from the bottom side going up. Approaching the bottom of the ditch from the side that was already slanted. I was doing this to make it so I could mow it versus using a weed whacher.
Having abused a lot of tractors in the past, this tractor is not built well enough to handle the job if back blading will bent a cylinder without me even knowing that hit something hard enough to bend a rod!
If financed through kubota, you payed for insurance in the loan.$250 deductible. If you payed cash then i doubt you have it, since it is not ringing any bells. Your dealer should still work with you on the issue. You machine is relatively new. It may be a defect. You never answered my question, is this a La555 or la805?Thanks
What is a KTAC claim?