Hi All,
Loooong time, first time. After many many years of imagining myself owning a tractor I'm very gratefully the owner of a an L47 that I've put 180 hours on in the past two or three months. I have a hillside I'm terracing.
The point: I have a hydraulic line in need of replacement. A leak with a palpable blister on the line appeared, and then quickly developed into a gusher.
The new line arrived today and I'm gearing up to do the work. It's brand new and well under warranty but the soonest my local place can send a guy to me is two weeks out.
I'm looking for any ideas on how to access the fitting under the cylinder on the boom arm and general advice on the procedure. I figure I'll have to remove the pin (green) holding the cylinder in place and then swing it out in order to get to the fittings. My plan : Undo the retaining bolt and push the pin out with a dowel and mallet, then retract the cylinder while its free. Swing the cylinder out, swap the lines, and then repeat the process in reverse. I'm assuming all of these components will be man-handle able.
Any and all advice/feedback would be welcome.
-d
Loooong time, first time. After many many years of imagining myself owning a tractor I'm very gratefully the owner of a an L47 that I've put 180 hours on in the past two or three months. I have a hillside I'm terracing.
The point: I have a hydraulic line in need of replacement. A leak with a palpable blister on the line appeared, and then quickly developed into a gusher.
The new line arrived today and I'm gearing up to do the work. It's brand new and well under warranty but the soonest my local place can send a guy to me is two weeks out.
I'm looking for any ideas on how to access the fitting under the cylinder on the boom arm and general advice on the procedure. I figure I'll have to remove the pin (green) holding the cylinder in place and then swing it out in order to get to the fittings. My plan : Undo the retaining bolt and push the pin out with a dowel and mallet, then retract the cylinder while its free. Swing the cylinder out, swap the lines, and then repeat the process in reverse. I'm assuming all of these components will be man-handle able.
Any and all advice/feedback would be welcome.
-d