sbeckwith
Member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2011
- Messages
- 29
- Tractor
- John Deere 4720, Kubota L3830, John Deere 2355 MFWD, John Deere 4430, Case 1030, John Deere B, John Deere 730D, Hustler SD60
I had the curl cylinder stop working when moving snow Christmas eve. (Why of course - perfect timing and no way to get parts)
The curl cylinders would not rotate up and of course - I believe it was around -1 degrees to boot AND I need this loader to feed 50 head of cattle.
So - I get it back to the shop to figure it out. I run the hydraulics to see if I can detect any heat in either cylinder and sure enough - one has heat. I pull the pin closest to the bucket to service the cylinder. I pull on the rod and to my surprise - it pulled right out of the cylinder... The bloody piston unscrewed from the rod.
So - Here is where I am - I removed the c-clip and had to pound the piece that holds the rod in far enough to insert the piece I made from sch40 pvc pipe in order to keep that part from engaging when pulling it back out. Problem is - I can't get piece to move back out - and the only method I have is a 3 lb slide hammer.
Any suggestions? Cattle are getting hungry and it's 2am and the dealership doesn't open till Tuesday.
I am going to grab some sleep - but I am thinking of plugging the lines to that cylinder and hope it will be strong enough to load some round bales into the feeders. Any thoughts on that?
On another note - I don't care for this design at all. Much more prefer the design where the cap is threaded onto the cylinder. Thanks for any suggestions while I go grab some zzz's
The curl cylinders would not rotate up and of course - I believe it was around -1 degrees to boot AND I need this loader to feed 50 head of cattle.
So - I get it back to the shop to figure it out. I run the hydraulics to see if I can detect any heat in either cylinder and sure enough - one has heat. I pull the pin closest to the bucket to service the cylinder. I pull on the rod and to my surprise - it pulled right out of the cylinder... The bloody piston unscrewed from the rod.
So - Here is where I am - I removed the c-clip and had to pound the piece that holds the rod in far enough to insert the piece I made from sch40 pvc pipe in order to keep that part from engaging when pulling it back out. Problem is - I can't get piece to move back out - and the only method I have is a 3 lb slide hammer.
Any suggestions? Cattle are getting hungry and it's 2am and the dealership doesn't open till Tuesday.
I am going to grab some sleep - but I am thinking of plugging the lines to that cylinder and hope it will be strong enough to load some round bales into the feeders. Any thoughts on that?
On another note - I don't care for this design at all. Much more prefer the design where the cap is threaded onto the cylinder. Thanks for any suggestions while I go grab some zzz's