Bumper, very clear explanation; now I get your point. :thumbsup: So long as
both the rod side and the cylinder side of the toplink cylinder are full of oil when the QDs are disconnected, the piston and rod are in stasis, unable to move in either direction, even with a leaky piston main seal. The cylinder can't
retract any further because there is no more room in the cylinder to accommodate any portion of the rod that is outside the cylinder. Nor can the cylinder
extend any further because there is nothing to replace the volume of the rod as the weight of the 3pt implement attempts to pull it out of the cylinder. There is thus created a nearly perfect vacuum.
Further, if the piston main seal is
not leaky, as is likely the case with a new, high-quality toplink, there is simultaneously a
second force at work, which is the only one I was previously focused on: The fluid on the rod side of the piston will keep it from moving because the fluid has no where to go to make room for it.
This is a very interesting discussion indeed. And, and just in case anyone thinks we've strayed from the OP's original topic:

The bottom line for Cleat, who posted his 3pt snowblower example (post #83) as a drawback of a hydraulic toplink, is that disconnecting the QDs should indeed lock the cylinder in place so he can use the rear remotes for chute direction and deflection. At least so long as the cylinder is completely filled with oil and its ports (including the hoses) don't allow fluid to escape the cylinder!
Except you are forgetting one thing: The gland seal is designed to retain oil under pressure, not under vacuum,
as mentioned several times above. Air will enter at the gland seal, and the rod will extend.
The scenario with blocked ports and no piston is the same as one with an "imperfect" piston seal. Even
one drop of oil per hour past the piston seal under extension force, will cause a vacuum ON BOTH SIDES
of the piston.
When a toplink cylinder is new, the piston seal is very tight, but even after a few dozen hours of use, the
piston seals get looser, and even pass a tiny bit of oil. That is all it takes for them to extend while
loaded, with the ports blocked. Also note that some gland seals are better than others at resisting
air entering from the outside.
Dfkrug, maybe we'll need to agree to disagree, but I don't think this is correct, so long as there is no leakage of oil from the cylinder ports. And I think that is so regardless of whether there is an imperfect piston seal. In extension under load (as the weight of the implement tries to pull the rod out), the oil on the rod side can't escape the rod-side chamber. So the piston cannot possibly descend because the oil can't be compressed. That much is intuitive to me. But even if the piston seal is imperfect, the rod and piston still can't descend for the reason Bumper explained, unless there is already air in the chamber on the cylinder side, in which case oil can enter to that extent to fill the void created by the rod exiting the cylinder (the air can be compressed to take up less space, allowing room for the incoming oil).
In any event, I just don't see how air can ever be drawn in through the rod's gland seal on a hydraulic toplink while there is a load attempting to extend the rod. Seems to me the pressure on the gland seal is coming from the
inside in that situation. :scratchchin: