The lines coming on top of your valve body are pilot lines to push the valves open or close. These would be coming from your joystick.
The valves with the yellow caps, Im pretty sure are Secondary Relief valves or circuit relief valves they may also be called.
The Secondary relief valves are used on some functions ( especially diggers ) as they come under some extreme forces. A circuit or function that is not being used at the time, ( even only for a slight bit of time ) is not open back to the Main relief valve. Therefore when that circuit comes under some extreme forces, and the hydraulic pressure spikes up, then secondary relief valve will open up to dump some fluid back to tank.
The seconday relief valves is set lower ( not by much ) than your main relief valve.
As your Thumb circuit does not have this Seconday relief valve, then I would not worry about it with it falling down. However if it did, then I would be checking this out.
Now to the Thumb falling down:
I really am suspecting your seals in the Thumb cylinder have had it,
however 1st of all just put your Thumb as far back as possible, turn the machine off and go to your valve body and just listen to see if you can hear any fluid bypassing through the valve. If it is, then check out the spool, bore and centralising spring.
If not ( as I suspect ) then lets start the machine up, put the Thumb all the way back, and lower the boom down so that the bucket and Thumb rest on the ground.
Turn off machine and take off the piston side ( not rod side ) hose off. Blank the hose ( I think its a -12 JIC male plug, but please check ).
Now start the machine, leave bucket and Thumb on the ground. Now try and and pull the Thumb back with the Hydraulics. Now there should be NO oil coming out of the piston side of the cylinder. If there is, your cylinder seals have had it. Go buy a new set of seals and install in cylinder.
Ok so your probably asking why have my seals gone if its only 3 weeks old?
Some reasons why I think so.
1/ Cheap cylinder with cheap seals installed.
2/ Thumb does not have a mechancial stop on it, so basically the piston is bottoming out all the time its pulled back. When pulling it back all the way, ensure the operators do not slam it back, make sure they do it smoothly or stop pulling it back before it bottoms out.
Or put in a mechanical stop, to stop the piston bottoming out on the cylinder.
3/ Make sure that when digging, the Thumb is way out of the way. ( It has no secondary relief valve to protect it ) Even to a point of lowering the bucket on the ground, make sure the bucket is on the ground 1st before, you come down with the Thumb.
I can see some paint has rubbed off at the bottom of the Thumb and it looks like it has been dragged through the ground a bit. Not designed for this, even just a little bit.
Ok I hope some of this helps, good luck !
Duff:thumbsup: