TraderMark
Gold Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2001
- Messages
- 383
- Location
- Southeast Georgia
- Tractor
- Ford 1720, 2910 John Deere 970, Case 1845
Kim is right.
All of the older larger, true AG tractors had remote valves that detent both ways until the end of the cylinder stroke. Most of them had a way to defeat this feature if desired. I remember on the JD's it was a little plastic tab in the lever slot that you flipped up. That locked out the "auto detent" so it was non-functional if that's what you desired.
I'm not sure if they still offer that feature on the larger Ag tractors. Been a long time since I was a real farmer and had tractors that big.
I haven't ever seen that feature on a CUT. I think it's mostly because there are few people who pull wheeled implements all day long that require remote hydraulics to lift and lower.
Mark
All of the older larger, true AG tractors had remote valves that detent both ways until the end of the cylinder stroke. Most of them had a way to defeat this feature if desired. I remember on the JD's it was a little plastic tab in the lever slot that you flipped up. That locked out the "auto detent" so it was non-functional if that's what you desired.
I'm not sure if they still offer that feature on the larger Ag tractors. Been a long time since I was a real farmer and had tractors that big.
I haven't ever seen that feature on a CUT. I think it's mostly because there are few people who pull wheeled implements all day long that require remote hydraulics to lift and lower.
Mark