Jay4200
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 2,053
- Location
- Hudson/Weare, NH
- Tractor
- L4200GST w/ LA680 & BX2200D w/ LA211
Ugh - I keep finding more and more nasty things with this used L4200 tractor purchase of mine...note: dinged piston shaft post elsewhere...
When I got the tractor, there was a leaking hose on the attached BH9000 backhoe - one of the lateral movement criss-cross hoses. I replaced the hose today - the new one incidentally was made too long by the dealer and now rubs against another line when I swing the 'hoe past about 45 degrees left - which is why it wore through and leaked in the first place - so eventually I'm going to have to do it again. Pshaw. Oh well, I want to change them all eventually.
The tractor seemed a little loud around the PTO area, and sounded a little thumpy, which I guessed was the pump running with low on fluid. I didn't dare do anything with it until I fixed the line and topped it off.
The hydro fluid was below the site glass by about an inch or two (very unscientific measure via piece of wire as a dipstick). It ended up taking over 2-3 gallons (!!) of fluid to get the level up to the middle of the site glass.
Since the old owner did absolutely no maintenance for 300 meter hours, and the hose leak was very slow, I can assume that the machine ran a couple of gallons low for a long time. The pump/PTO area did seem to quiet down a bit once it was full, but I did hear a distinct and fairly loud "thunk" while I was listening to it - just one though. It had only run for a minute or less - maybe just air getting pushed through (I hope)?
Question: How severe is a 2-3 gallon low condition? What if it was run a gallon or three low for 100 hours? Should I panic?
Thanks - Jay
When I got the tractor, there was a leaking hose on the attached BH9000 backhoe - one of the lateral movement criss-cross hoses. I replaced the hose today - the new one incidentally was made too long by the dealer and now rubs against another line when I swing the 'hoe past about 45 degrees left - which is why it wore through and leaked in the first place - so eventually I'm going to have to do it again. Pshaw. Oh well, I want to change them all eventually.
The tractor seemed a little loud around the PTO area, and sounded a little thumpy, which I guessed was the pump running with low on fluid. I didn't dare do anything with it until I fixed the line and topped it off.
The hydro fluid was below the site glass by about an inch or two (very unscientific measure via piece of wire as a dipstick). It ended up taking over 2-3 gallons (!!) of fluid to get the level up to the middle of the site glass.
Since the old owner did absolutely no maintenance for 300 meter hours, and the hose leak was very slow, I can assume that the machine ran a couple of gallons low for a long time. The pump/PTO area did seem to quiet down a bit once it was full, but I did hear a distinct and fairly loud "thunk" while I was listening to it - just one though. It had only run for a minute or less - maybe just air getting pushed through (I hope)?
Question: How severe is a 2-3 gallon low condition? What if it was run a gallon or three low for 100 hours? Should I panic?
Thanks - Jay