TL720 Lift cylinder

247mechanical

New member

Equipment
kubota L35
Jun 15, 2016
3
0
0
Diamond, Ohio
Hi everyone,

I have a L35 with a TL720 loader (ser# 10093). Well the boom cylinder has had a small drip for awhile. Yesterday the packing blew while using it. I picked up a seal kit at the dealer, but I cannot get the aluminum end cap to break loose from the cylinder. I took it to a hydraulics shop and they said they will try to get it apart (they also told me it was a stupid design by Kubota to mix metals like that). So if they can't get it apart, I called the dealer to check on availability of a new boom cylinder and they said it was no longer available???

Has anyone had any experience with this? And are there any substitute cylinders for my loader
 

North Idaho Wolfman

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Staff member
Lifetime Member

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L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
Jun 9, 2013
30,177
6,346
113
Sandpoint, ID
You will probably have to have one custom made. :eek:
 

L35

Well-known member

Equipment
L35/TL720/BT900/York rake/Valby chipper
Jun 13, 2010
505
383
63
CT
If you can't get it loose with the spanner get after it with a large pipe wrench and some heat. Break it loose while its mounted to the tractor to hold the cylinder still.
 

steveInMaryland

New member

Equipment
L35, b2710
Nov 23, 2015
98
0
0
marriotsville, MD, USA
Actually I can't agree more with L35. My curl cylinders had the same two little 1/4 holes for a spanner wrench but they have been so abused the spanner won't work anymore.

I took a hacksaw blade down the edge of the cylinder lip of the steel tubes and removed the two holes and cut a perpendicular slice of the aluminum to create an end I could get a really big adjustable wrench on the end and removed them. They are not really super tightly torqued in there, just need a bit of material. In the end, a big pipe wrench can get them out but a replacement end cap is about $300.00. You can replace the whole cylinder for that.

I can pm you a drawing if you like.

Semper Fi.
Steve
 

Rolling Stock

New member

Equipment
L4350DT, LA950 loader
Jun 17, 2016
25
0
0
Othello, WA
FYI, sometimes you cannot get an aftermarket cylinder with the exact same specs. If you are unable to repair it I recommend replacing both cylinders as a set for 2 reason. First, with the possibility of not having the same specs internal and external spacers may need to be fabricated and installed so the cylinders are matched at full stroke and collapsed so as to not bend your loader or damage mounts. Second, with 1 cylinder being older the remaining service life is a lot less and performance will be uneven.

Just my .02
 

lugbolt

Well-known member

Equipment
ZG127S-54
Oct 15, 2015
5,205
1,889
113
Mid, South, USA
Ran into this issue a while back. The steel threads in the barrel of the cylinder assembly get corroded (rusty) and then the aluminum gland gets welded (seized) to the barrel. Removing it usually means it will get damaged. If not damaged too badly (broken), a machine shop should be able to make a new gland up pretty easily. It won't be all that cheap but it will be a LOT cheaper than buying a new replacement cylinder assembly from Kubota.