Ervin Smith
Silver Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2011
- Messages
- 122
- Location
- Foley, MO 63347
- Tractor
- 1955 Ford 800, 1966 Ford 5000, 1992 White Gt1855 GT2055, Bobcat 753
I burst a hydraulic hose that goes to my front loader on my 1966 Ford 5000, on the bucket, now neither the up and down controls nor the bucket will not work.
Physically replacing the hose seems as if it will be easy. I assume that once this is done the hydraulic system will need to be bled, no different from the brakes on my car.
My question is, how do you bleed the hydraulics on the tractor and how high do I fill the system, there is not a resovoir to put it in, and it is hocked up direct into the tractor hydraulics? I put two quarts back in, but maybe thats not enough. who know how much leaked out.
Will it harm it if I over fill it, the cap on the fill point seems to have a check valve on it wiggle around on top the plug. Mybe thats for looks or a different purpose, like to identifiy it, So it wouldn't make sense since because it should be under pressure.
Physically replacing the hose seems as if it will be easy. I assume that once this is done the hydraulic system will need to be bled, no different from the brakes on my car.
My question is, how do you bleed the hydraulics on the tractor and how high do I fill the system, there is not a resovoir to put it in, and it is hocked up direct into the tractor hydraulics? I put two quarts back in, but maybe thats not enough. who know how much leaked out.
Will it harm it if I over fill it, the cap on the fill point seems to have a check valve on it wiggle around on top the plug. Mybe thats for looks or a different purpose, like to identifiy it, So it wouldn't make sense since because it should be under pressure.