This info is 8n specific.. if you have a 9n/2n or a NAA / jubilee / hundred series.. only some of it applies.
First.. pull right side cover.. This means you are removing the running board, and radious rod socket.
with the tractor running, and the pto engaged.. run the lift up using the hytrol lever.. Look for oil leaks on the inside. Oil from the mouth of the piston indicated bad rings or a bad cylinder... or a hole in the piston. Oil from around the cylinder means a bad dime shaped gasket between the cyl and the hyd top cover. Oil from the front right top side of the case means the top cover gasket has blown out on the inside letting fluid out of the standpipe. oil from the lower right front corner means the lower pump gasket has blown out letting oil out the bottom of the stand pipe. Oil from the pump sides means a cracked pump chamber, or one of the two chamber gaskets has blown. lots of oil swirling in front of the pump menas the check / relief valve has stuck open, or has blown out / unscrewed. If no oil leaks are present, make sure that when you move the hytrol lever, that the long arm that runs down to the hyd pump intake/exhaust valve is actually moving the valve into and out of the body of the pump.
If none of this helps.. you may need to drop the pump / pull the top cover. Always possible that a 50 cent cam follower pin has worn thru.. the hytrol lever has a pin on the inside which follows a metal contour that in turn moves that long control arm that goes down to the pump.
I just rebuilt the hyds on my 8n 2 months ago. Parts were less than 100 bucks shipped for all gaskets, new upgraded piston that uses a washer and oring instead of steel rings.. a new relief/check valve, side cover and pto gaskets.. etc. dowel rod, etc.. and a brake hone to resurface my cylinder. If I had bought the cyl.. that would have been another 80 bucks. Usually unless your cyl is completely gutted.. a hone works fine.
It's always possible that some of your draft linkage has come apart on the back side of the hytrol valve. I strongly suggest you get a copy of the I&T fo-4 manual.. it takes you thru the r&r of the pump, inculding torque values. Pretty much a 1 wrench job, as the pto bolts, side cover bolts, top cover bolts and bottom cover bolts are all the same size ( 11/16? or 9/16.. can't remember.. )
Don't use any gasket pucky on the top cover and bottom cover gaskets, as the hyd pressure at the front corner standpipe is 1700 psi.. and gaskets with pucky on them will blow out.. the thin paper is fine.
Gasket puckey however is fine on the pto gasket and side cover gasket.. though it doesn't need it. Don't use gasket pucky on the three small gaskets on top of the lift cyl either.. they go between the cyl and the top cover.
If you need part numbers, i have a sheet in front of me for what I ordered, and prices.. from
www.just8ns.com.. pretty much the best prices.. and nice guys.
It took me 9.5 hours from driving the tractor in to driving it out of the garage. that included clean up time as this is a super oily / greasy job.
Refill with 4.5 gals of 90wt mineral oil gl-1.. tsc or napa has it. 134d oil from NH or unit-tran oil is ok.. but pretty thin. Fill oil till it drips out of one of the bottom holes on the inspection cover. This is plenty of oil for the tran/diffy/hyd pump, and keep oil from puddling around the axle seals in the mouth of the axle trumpets, and from setting on the tranny input seal... all 3 of those are prone to leak on a 50-60 year old machine.
That should consume a little over 4 gallons of your 5 gallon pail of oil. Don't use 80w90 gl-5 oils.. the gl-5 oil is known to have compounds which can damage yellow metal.. and the cam blocksin your pump are yellow metal.
I did mine over a long 3 day weekend.. if you can work on it 1 day straight.. figure 8.5 hours if you stick to it.
Only tricky part is getting the long arm from the top cover lined back up in the slot on the valve inthe pump. Top cover weighs? 65pounds. bottom pump weights 40?
Soundguy