danswenson
Member
Hello all,
Over summer of 2021 I experienced a problem with my 1450 where it was heavily leaking hydro fluid when operating. I knew next to nothing about the hydraulics in the tractor, so I started researching and taking things apart. I eventually went so far as splitting the tractor to replace the cork gasket. When I put everything back together I was re-fitting the hydro lines to the pump and one of the lines almost tore in half. I guess it must have been a pin-hole leak in the line the whole time. I have a dual-spool 1450 (apparently fairly rare) which uses a different hydro line configuration than the single-spool models. This made finding replacements online all but impossible.
I was discussing this problem with a handy coworker when he suggested fabricating my own line out of nickel-copper brake line. I'd never done anything like that, so I'm here to tell you it is among the more easy and straightforward processes I've ever learned. Nickel-copper is so malleable you can basically bend it by hand unless you need to make a very tight radius.
As I planned to re-use the original fittings, the biggest problem I had was finding a reasonably-priced 37-degree flaring tool. Since completing the repair, I've been told by reliable sources that a 45-degree tool would have been fine in this application.
This was the location of the tear.
Cheap 37-degree flaring tool. I used 3/8" tubing for this fix.
I made a few test flares to make sure I had the basic idea before trying to actually fabricate a line. I definitely messed up a 4-5 feet of tubing trying to learn how to make bends without kinking the line, but the line is relatively cheap. Here's some of my initial test pieces:
Once I had the shape I needed, I put the fittings on (very important to put on the fittings first before flaring), and flared the ends. I had to do a little bit of bending in place to get everything lined up, but it works and has plenty of clearance to the fan and rag joint. It's definitely not as pretty as the OEM part with tight radiuses, etc., but it got the job done fast and cheap. I replaced the other line the same way a few weeks later just to be safe (don't have pictures of that right now). Here's a pic of the first line installed:
Anyway, that was the project and I wanted to share in case this helps anyone out in the future. Happy for any feedback.
All the best
Over summer of 2021 I experienced a problem with my 1450 where it was heavily leaking hydro fluid when operating. I knew next to nothing about the hydraulics in the tractor, so I started researching and taking things apart. I eventually went so far as splitting the tractor to replace the cork gasket. When I put everything back together I was re-fitting the hydro lines to the pump and one of the lines almost tore in half. I guess it must have been a pin-hole leak in the line the whole time. I have a dual-spool 1450 (apparently fairly rare) which uses a different hydro line configuration than the single-spool models. This made finding replacements online all but impossible.
I was discussing this problem with a handy coworker when he suggested fabricating my own line out of nickel-copper brake line. I'd never done anything like that, so I'm here to tell you it is among the more easy and straightforward processes I've ever learned. Nickel-copper is so malleable you can basically bend it by hand unless you need to make a very tight radius.
As I planned to re-use the original fittings, the biggest problem I had was finding a reasonably-priced 37-degree flaring tool. Since completing the repair, I've been told by reliable sources that a 45-degree tool would have been fine in this application.
This was the location of the tear.
Cheap 37-degree flaring tool. I used 3/8" tubing for this fix.
I made a few test flares to make sure I had the basic idea before trying to actually fabricate a line. I definitely messed up a 4-5 feet of tubing trying to learn how to make bends without kinking the line, but the line is relatively cheap. Here's some of my initial test pieces:
Once I had the shape I needed, I put the fittings on (very important to put on the fittings first before flaring), and flared the ends. I had to do a little bit of bending in place to get everything lined up, but it works and has plenty of clearance to the fan and rag joint. It's definitely not as pretty as the OEM part with tight radiuses, etc., but it got the job done fast and cheap. I replaced the other line the same way a few weeks later just to be safe (don't have pictures of that right now). Here's a pic of the first line installed:
Anyway, that was the project and I wanted to share in case this helps anyone out in the future. Happy for any feedback.
All the best