bigdeano
Platinum Member
Any update on what the problem was?
Thanks to all.
Yes, it is the valve!
Yes, it is the FEL.
Yes, the valve appears to work properly externally.
I removed the valve today. I should have it apart this weekend.
How did you determine the valve was at fault?
Did you perform a leak down test with the cylinders and hoses isolated from the valve? That would be the first priority and quick and cheap to do. In most cases you can load the bucket raise it up a foot and prop it up with lumber. Unplug the quick couplers and back off the lumber, if it drifts back down the cylinder seals are the problem. If it stays up and does not drift down the valve is the problem and needs to be replaced with a new one.
It depends on which direction the cyl is mounted. The cyl shouldnt retract, even without a piston on the end of the rod because the oil cant compress. If the cyl is mounted so that the cy extends to lower the bucket, the rod can pull out of the barrel and the oil will pull apart and allow the bucket to fall. The piston seals would have to be bad for this to happen. It would depend on if there is enough weight hanging off the lift arms, but a loaded bucket could fall or at least creep down. I havent seen many loaders with cyl mounted in the method I mentioned, but I have seen a few so they are out there. Poor design that way, but it is what it is.You could totally remove the piston seals, and do as you describe, and as long as the hoses and QD's dont pour oil onto the ground, the cylinders aint gonna move and the loader WILL NOT drift.
For a loader to drift, the oil has to go somewhere OUTSIDE the cylinder
It depends on which direction the cyl is mounted. The cyl shouldnt retract, even without a piston on the end of the rod because the oil cant compress. If the cyl is mounted so that the cy extends to lower the bucket, the rod can pull out of the barrel and the oil will pull apart and allow the bucket to fall. The piston seals would have to be bad for this to happen. It would depend on if there is enough weight hanging off the lift arms, but a loaded bucket could fall or at least creep down. I havent seen many loaders with cyl mounted in the method I mentioned, but I have seen a few so they are out there. Poor design that way, but it is what it is.
UPDATE
I remove the valve and could not find a problem. I bought a new valve and installed it.
Read all the post in an other thread here on TBN. New I was on the right track with it having to be the valve.
Worked the tractor. Problem solved.
Wait...Not so fast. Problem is back but not as bad.
Lift is faster but not where I think is should be or once was. Bucket sometimes drops while lifting.
Reading the manual says pulling back on the joystick, valve goes in, loader goes up. Not the case!
This is a used tractor.
There is a ring on the joystick with blue and green indications on it. In one color position the bucket does not move with the arms going up and the other color position the bucket moves as the arms go up to keep the same orientation with the ground, or self leveling.
That self leveling feature was not on the tractor when I bought it.
I believe when it was taken off, they put the joystick on backwards. Swapping the hoses puts the up/down operations in the correct positions but the valve is moving in the wrong direction.
This would not be a problem on a simple valve, but my valve has a float feature for back dragging.
If I am correct, that is why the bucket drops while lifting.
It may also be why I think it is slow, if there is regen in it.
The manual does not say anything about regen but it describes a slightly different flow between lift and lower.
I should get around to reinstalling the joystick 180 degrees from its current mounting position this week.
Buying a new valve was a good thing. The arms do not drift down much at all now.
I may be wrong but I believe the lift speed should be somewhat closer to the lower speed.
Currently the lift speed is less than 1/4 of the lower speed.
After I get the float on the correct side of the joystick, hopefully the speed will increase. If not, then I will look at replacing the rod seals. UNLESS, someone here explains to me something I am missing.
A BIG Thanks to all of you for your input!
I have personally never seen a loader that way.
Curl cylinders....yes. Loader cylinders....no.
For the purpose of 99% of the threads here on TBN about the subject, and all the current and future readers........a loader (as in lift and not curl) will NOT drift down due to faulty cylinder seals. I have no idea why this mis-information keeps getting spread.