Yup, the power beyond kit plus your own external valve should do the trick (that's what I'm doing so I hope so ... /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif)
As far as the PB port constantly having pressure - sort of. Your hydraulic pump is always pumping fluid whether or not you are actually using a valve for anything. All this fluid goes through the center of all the valve blocks in the loop and back to the storage tank (your transmission housing) - a continuous flow whenever your tractor is running.
When you pull on a valve lever, some or all of this fluid is diverted into a hydraulic cylinder causing the rod to move. The rod movement pushes fluid out the other side of the cylinder back into the valve body where it is directed out the return port of the valve body to re-join the regular fluid flow on it's way back to the tank. If you extend a cylinder all the way or otherwise block it's movement AND you have the controlling valve spool fully shifted, the fluid will be unable to flow and the pressure relief valve will come into play.
The pump is unable to stop pumping and if the fluid can't follow it's normal path, the pressure will rise until the relief valve opens and provides a path directly back to the tank, bypassing the normal hydraulic loop. While this is happening, however, the hydraulic loop up to the point where the valve spool is trying to direct fluid into the stalled cylinder will be under maximum pressure.
So, if you have no valves activated, the PB port will have lots of flow through it but very little pressure. If you shift a valve downstream of the PB port and stall a cylinder, the PB port will have no flow through it but will be pressured up to the relief valve setting of your tractor (probably 2000 - 2500 psi). If you shift a valve but it's cylinder isn't stalled (ie. raising the loader), you will have the same flow as a no-valves-shifted situation but the pressure will be somewhere between zero and max. (exactly enough to move the cylinder against it's applied load).
Having valves in series like in this application means that the upstream valves can effectively have priority over and can disable downstream ones. In my case, after I get my external valves hooked up, if I stall a cylinder connected to one of them, my loader and possibly 3pt hitch won't function while I'm holding the remote valve fully shifted. In fact this is already the case with the loader and 3pt. Which ever one is first in the loop will cause the other to lose power if it gets stalled and you try to use them both at the same time. In practice this will never really be a problem - just let go of the valve handle and everything is good to go again.
Hopefully this all made sense. If not, I'll try again ....
/forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif