Hi everyone,
I have been checking out the site for a while since I purchased a rough 1862. One of the issues for me seems to be water in the hydro fluid. My Hydro is noisy and the fluid looks like a vanilla milk shake float - foam and all. Interestingly, after it heats up, noise goes away.
I am about to change the fluid, but I have been puzzling over how so much water gets into the fluid? It seems to me that I have a special tractor with a broken hydro dipstick cap which is now cup shaped to really trap as much rain fall as possible. The PO left the tractor outside to see just how much water he could trap and to see how many seasons it takes before you have completely faded the paint.
But I am not so sure the broken cap accounts for the water. It seems to me that the hydro resevoir will naturally pull in moisture from the air especially in the winter: the oil heats up -- the oil cools down - vacuum forms - moist air from the melting snow gets sucked in. Volia, water in the hydro.
If this is the case, does over filling the resevoir and allowing for less air in the resevoir make sense? Perhaps there is a downside to too much fluid? Or maybe, this isn't the issue at all?
Thanks for your thoughts
Mike
PS for those concerned about the dipstick, a new one is on the way!
I have been checking out the site for a while since I purchased a rough 1862. One of the issues for me seems to be water in the hydro fluid. My Hydro is noisy and the fluid looks like a vanilla milk shake float - foam and all. Interestingly, after it heats up, noise goes away.
I am about to change the fluid, but I have been puzzling over how so much water gets into the fluid? It seems to me that I have a special tractor with a broken hydro dipstick cap which is now cup shaped to really trap as much rain fall as possible. The PO left the tractor outside to see just how much water he could trap and to see how many seasons it takes before you have completely faded the paint.
But I am not so sure the broken cap accounts for the water. It seems to me that the hydro resevoir will naturally pull in moisture from the air especially in the winter: the oil heats up -- the oil cools down - vacuum forms - moist air from the melting snow gets sucked in. Volia, water in the hydro.
If this is the case, does over filling the resevoir and allowing for less air in the resevoir make sense? Perhaps there is a downside to too much fluid? Or maybe, this isn't the issue at all?
Thanks for your thoughts
Mike
PS for those concerned about the dipstick, a new one is on the way!