Wow, sorry for not noticing this for so long.
I am NOT going to push the electro-hydraulic actuator solution but i will at least explain it, in my case anyway. I got mine (2 of em) for $200/ea on ebay. Not because they were exactly what i wanted (theyre on the small side for this job) but because they were the ONLY reasonably priced ones i found for sale over a period of about half a year.
I installed one as a power top link on my Kubota B6100 powered through a 6-terminal ‘motor-reversing’ switch. I verified it pulls no more than 22amps on 12v when hitting its relief pressure. I have more like a TWO amp charging system on that tractor but you dont run a top link all that often so it averages out just fine. The first one i ordered a spherical rod end (ball joint) that would screw onto the rod and left the base end a regular crosspin hole. Eventually after maybe a year i got careless and let an implement jam up on the onboard reservoir of the cylinder and crack it, so i swapped on the extra one i had until i repaired the other one. This time i just welded ball ends on both ends because i was feeing a lot more confident about welding by then.
So, issues..
1. availability. You want a different size, different force level? tough crap. These things barely exist in a competitive price range to normal hydraulic options. Keeping in mind, by the time you hit 350$ or so you can buy a standalone 12v hydraulic power pack and any dang cylinder you like from surplus center and have tons of options.. but in the <$300 range options for electro-hydraulic actuators are extremely limited.
2. Strength. The ones i have are barely strong enough to handle the job of top link on my tractor which is the absolute bottom end of the cat1 size range. It has no problem pushing out (duh, gravity) but when pulling the top in it struggles (just really slow) with 300-400lb attachments and i doubt it would tilt up my bush hogs at all, though i havent tried. You can work around it pretty easy if it were to actually stall out pulling on something, but this is the main reason i dont really recommend the specific cylinders i bought for anything other than the smallest cat1 applications. I do think these exact models would be good for anything that has to do with pushing wheels down on a drag implement, or angle adjustment on an implement. I dont foresee ever NOT using the ones i have, but i will eventually use them for something besides a top link. Like welding, my familiarity with hydraulics has improved leaps and bounds and i can diy a full hydraulic top link setup right now, just waiting on motivation.
So given the same circumstances i would do the same thing over again, it truly is ‘good enough’ for my application and cheaper and simpler overall than 99% of all hydraulic
top link setups. I really like these things. But i dont go songing their praises because i cant point you directly to a bigger model that would be strong enough for a bigger machine/implements and still cost less than a ‘regular’ hydraulic top link setup. So in some ways, my setup is a fluke. But its still cool for me, and im still happy with it and glad i did it.
sorry about image rotation