kubotaboy348
New member
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2010
- Messages
- 3
- Tractor
- Kubota B7800
Well it is nice that I finally found others that can bend the BL4690 crowd cylinder. And now I know what to avoid. It seems that when things are digging well and you get to a critical point in a trench that is when you will bend that cylinder rod. I just bent my fourth cylinder yesterday, a 12" deep trench crossing a hard packed road. Crowing in while curling the bucket to clear the bottom of the trench.
I bent the first one while digging my first trench from my lake to the house for geothermal lines. That was in soft soil, Kubota said it must have been abuse, so I bought a new cylinder. They are fairly easy to replace, guess I now know what is behind their design. It did not take long to bend the new cylinder, about 15 feet from the house crossing a hard packed drive. Dealer took the hoe back for analysis, and finally said he replaced the valve assembly due to a sticky pressure relief valve.
All seemed to work well after that for a year of so, then out of the blue while digging a trench for a knee wall by the house I executed the now known maneuver for bending crowd cylinders. That was about 3 years ago, since then I have dug lots of different areas with out incident. Doing that
same crowd while curling. Seems that the key is the hard bottom where the bucket can cause the greater torque while curling and force the dipper arm back on the crowd cylinder.
New cylinder from Kubota Georgia plant goes for $373. My guess is they get cheaper the more they have to replace them.
I bent the first one while digging my first trench from my lake to the house for geothermal lines. That was in soft soil, Kubota said it must have been abuse, so I bought a new cylinder. They are fairly easy to replace, guess I now know what is behind their design. It did not take long to bend the new cylinder, about 15 feet from the house crossing a hard packed drive. Dealer took the hoe back for analysis, and finally said he replaced the valve assembly due to a sticky pressure relief valve.
All seemed to work well after that for a year of so, then out of the blue while digging a trench for a knee wall by the house I executed the now known maneuver for bending crowd cylinders. That was about 3 years ago, since then I have dug lots of different areas with out incident. Doing that
same crowd while curling. Seems that the key is the hard bottom where the bucket can cause the greater torque while curling and force the dipper arm back on the crowd cylinder.
New cylinder from Kubota Georgia plant goes for $373. My guess is they get cheaper the more they have to replace them.