Hello, I don't know even the basics about hydraulics and have little common sense/logic, so assume I know nothing.
I have an L275 and today I installed tees on the hydraulic junction box and added a pair of inline female quick-disconnects in order to run a log splitter. The connection job went fine and there were no leaks, but when the log splitter is attached the loader operates VERY slowly, if at all. The log splitter ram moves back and forth slowly (it might be normal speed; I heard it was slow but powerful) but has no power and will not split even a tiny log. When the splitter is detached, the loader begins working normally again.
Can I only run the loader OR the splitter? Not the end of the world if so; I can remove the tees and do just the solo female QDs and attach male QDs to the loader hoses for easy swapping back and forth.
Note that I'm not certain how much hydraulic fluid is in the tractor. Last fall a hose ruptured and it lost a lot of fluid, but I replaced what I estimate to be the amount lost at the very least (that is, if anything it is overfull). A little fluid was lost during the connection job today but very little compared to the previous incident, so I'm guessing fluid levels are not the problem.
Separate question, is it possible to connect/disconnect the QDs when the tractor is running? It didn't seem so, but I didn't try very hard and didn't want to mess anything up in the attempt.
I have an L275 and today I installed tees on the hydraulic junction box and added a pair of inline female quick-disconnects in order to run a log splitter. The connection job went fine and there were no leaks, but when the log splitter is attached the loader operates VERY slowly, if at all. The log splitter ram moves back and forth slowly (it might be normal speed; I heard it was slow but powerful) but has no power and will not split even a tiny log. When the splitter is detached, the loader begins working normally again.
Can I only run the loader OR the splitter? Not the end of the world if so; I can remove the tees and do just the solo female QDs and attach male QDs to the loader hoses for easy swapping back and forth.
Note that I'm not certain how much hydraulic fluid is in the tractor. Last fall a hose ruptured and it lost a lot of fluid, but I replaced what I estimate to be the amount lost at the very least (that is, if anything it is overfull). A little fluid was lost during the connection job today but very little compared to the previous incident, so I'm guessing fluid levels are not the problem.
Separate question, is it possible to connect/disconnect the QDs when the tractor is running? It didn't seem so, but I didn't try very hard and didn't want to mess anything up in the attempt.