OEM or after market Hydraulics Valve for LA211??

ravenh6

New member

Equipment
BX2200
Jan 5, 2016
2
0
0
Center Valley, PA
Good morning everyone. Although I’m new to the forum I’ve been coming here frequently since I’ve owned my Kubota. This is a great site to help trouble shoot issues. Last summer I was able to fix my diesel leaking problem thanks to this forum.

I own an older Kubota BX2200 with an LA211 loader. Recently the valve for the loader went bad. Since I know nothing about hydraulics a friend offered to look at it for me. When I got it back it was in pieces and he said that he couldn’t help. I took the valve to a hydraulics place and they quoted $680 to repair and put it back together. A new Kubota replacement is ~$800 (part no. 75532-62010). If I’m going to spend that kind of money I may as well get a new one. Does anyone know of an after-market replacement that would fit and function as well as the original? Thanks you for your help.
 

ravenh6

New member

Equipment
BX2200
Jan 5, 2016
2
0
0
Center Valley, PA
Yeah, that's the problem, I don't know enough about hydraulics to understand which of those units would work for the loader. The guy at the hydraulics shop wasn't much help either. He told me he couldn't identify an after-market unit that would match.
 

North Idaho Wolfman

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Jun 9, 2013
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In this instance, an OEM valve would be a better bet, less swapping of parts and components to fix it properly.
And probably cheaper in the long run, hydraulics can get real expensive swapping parts around.
 

davesl708

New member

Equipment
BX2200, LA211, RCK60B-22BX, 5ft. Rototiller, Rear Blade, 4ft Drag Harrow
Feb 24, 2013
40
2
0
Shawnee, Kansas
I might suggest rebuilding the old valve. Doing it yourself will be a good experience. The valve is not complicated. Just make sure you get the right spindle in the right hole. No harm if you don't. It won't work right if in wrong. Just switch them and good to go. The rebuild kit is far cheaper than a new valve or having a shop put it together.

It took me about an hour to remove rebuild and reinstall the valve on mine.
Most likely the valve was dirty inside and new seals/orings will have it back to new.

Download the parts list and drawing from Kubota. It will show you how it goes together.
 
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mikester

Well-known member

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M59 TLB
Oct 21, 2017
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Canada
www.divergentstuff.ca
I might suggest rebuilding the old valve. Doing it yourself will be a good experience. The valve is not complicated. Just make sure you get the right spindle in the right hole. No harm if you don't. It won't work right if in wrong. Just switch them and good to go. The rebuild kit is far cheaper than a new valve or having a shop put it together.

It took me about an hour to remove rebuild and reinstall the valve on mine.
Most likely the valve was dirty inside and new seals/orings will have it back to new.

Download the parts list and drawing from Kubota. It will show you how it goes together.
And have a super CLEAN work area!
 

shelkol

Active member

Equipment
bx-2200, Woods BH6000 backhoe, Tach-N-Go quick attach bucket, snow blower
Nov 12, 2015
195
162
43
Westford, Massachusetts
shelkol.com
If you decide to buy a new one: There were two versions of the valve, a 3-way and a 4-way. Make sure you get the 4-way. It will help you out if you ever decide to use the curl function for something else. Plenty of threads about this.