More like $100 difference in this case. Since I have been "overspending" lately my conscience is bothering me. OK, my cheapskate side is showing. No, it really won't damage me, but, eh, I'm frugal.
Mainly I am maintaining a shared private road and improving the drainage, making swales and improving drain paths. Using box blade/scraper and rock rake, mainly.
But now I'm also trying to level and clean up some very rocky mixed soil which is proving to be a problem due to the variety of rock sizes that keep being discovered. That is where the float feature started being mentioned.
This is all my own property, not doing it commercially. Given my demonstrated ability, or lack, I'd go broke quickly.
I guess I just need to lay back, relax and try to envision how float actually would work for me.
20 years ago I put four remotes on my B2910. Three of them have built in pilot operated check valves and one has float.
I have never needed more than three valves, and the only reason I need three is because I used two tilt cylinders in order to get a little more lift out of my three point hitch, while maintaining a maximum amount of tilt.
I find float on one tilt cylinder very useful when plowing snow or raking my driveway which has off camber areas. With tilt the rear blade or rake will follow the change in road surface angle.
Pilot operated check valves are great because they essentially lock a cylinder in place. You can’t have power operated check valves and float at the same time, they are mutually exclusive.
The problem with the float valve in my case is that it’s the nature of the beast that a control valve will allow the cylinder to leak down overtime. This does not happen with pilot operated check valves.
So if you have float on your tilt cylinder, and you’re doing something where you would like the tilt cylinder to maintain a fixed length, rather than changing length over time, you might not like having float on the tilt cylinder. For example, if you’re using a rotary cutter and desire to have it hold position, so you get an even cut. You might find that the side with the tilt cylinder, tied to the control valve with float, leaks down overtime. Of course this would probably happen anyway, whether you had float or not, if you don’t have the pilot operated check function. But this is not really an issue because you can swap the cylinders with the valves and put the float valve on the top link.
I guess what I’m thinking is that you need to ask yourself what’s more important: Holding cylinder length constant or having the ability for it to adjust length, according to the forces acting on it?
Personally, I’m a fan of having one or the other as compared to having a standard valve, which doesn’t float and also to some degree leaks down over time. I’m happy with my solution of using valves that have either float or pilot operated check valves built into them. I do find float on the tilt cylinder beneficial.