This just might be a problem that you come to accept... The hydraulic couplers on my tractors don't leak or seep when under use. They consistently leak with temperature changes; i.e. when it's cold and the metal surfaces contract - I'll have drips in the shed under nearly every group of connectors.
With all 3 machines from 325 hours to 1,500 hours. No matter. And they dripped when brand new...
Of course, I don't park on the concrete driveway in front of the house, either!
Regards.
Leaks bug the fire out of me, on the older tractors, i fixed them, with the 96 & 07 model tractors, haven't lost a drop yet, even on the couplers. I'm sure i will at some point & i'll take the time to stop them.
Of course, i'm **** enough to blow debris off equipment at the end of each days work, if i do have a problem, i'm not working on dirty equipment.
Ronnie
I can relate... I've got 50' of hose on my vertical air compressor - I know how to use it!
I should have "qualified" my comments with the recognition that every situation is different for each of us. When it's minus 30F here and it stays below zero every night for 3-4 weeks at a stretch; SCV couplers, front differentials at the input-output shafts, will seep.
Hydraulic fluid will freeze and look like crystallized honey.
All has to do with contraction of the metal surfaces with the cold.