I have a brand new BX25D that has 31 hours on it, and when setting in the shop for a day, the backhoe bucket drops down to to the point where I have to raise it before I move the tractor. Its not setting on the ground, just uncurled. If the backhoe is off the tractor, I use a strap also to hold the legs up just in case they settle...its on a cart also. This from what I have seen and read, this is all normal. The pump is not running and keeping pressure in the lines. But if you have the engine running, and it does this....well thats an issue.
Yep normal. What frustrating to me is during the storage of my BH off the tractor and on a dolly, the stabilizer feet slowly deploy making the BH bigger and harder to maneuver around. Have to connect up to the tractor to raise them up. Careful that you don't park the dolly such that it gets trapped because the legs sagged. I am now using some long cabinet making clamps to keep them upright. Tried some cheap zip ties and they stretched and broke.
pump running or not it will do that... once you position a cyl, then get off the spool valve, it is just the spool seal and the cyl seals to hold it...
the circuit is not being fed constant pressure from the pump.
3pt systems can use unloading and circuit regeneration to keep a sagging 3pt load lifted to near the same point, usually in a hunting or bobbing motion depending on the leak. circuit leaks, linkage signals repres of the system, then when in the correct position, circuit unloads.
that's differend from back hoe hyds and a multi circuit spool valve.
I understand what you are saying, but my point was, I could run the tractor for a few hours and not have it creep down. But let it set the same amount of time with out it running, and it would start to settle/creep. :thumbsup:
I also use the pins that are used to store the boom and keep it from swinging left to right when moving around. But the bucket itself does not have one. Thats the only one that will settle. I do however let all the pressure of my lines by moving all the levers as the book recommends. I dont have a problem with it doing what it does though unless it starts to get excessive. A good friend has a larger Kubota with a backhoe that does the exact same thing when not being used for a period of time. So no problems.....Jim
um.. the rate of creep setting should be less setting static than moving, assuming both circuits not powered. i'd think the moving running machine, due to vibration, might actually make creep worse.
now if you are using and constantly regenerating a circuit, then you are not compairing time to time.
if you take 2 identical machine that have the dipper circuit 'creep' at the same rate when off, and you raise both, then turn one machine off and leave the other running, but don't regen the dipper circuit.. they should hit the ground ABOUT the same time..
I used to have this problem, then I replaced the hydro oil with straight water, which is much thicker than oil, and I do not have the hydro leak down anymore. Plus, replacing the fluid in the trans, etc is now free! I just pull up the garden hose and fill er up! I am a genius.
I used to have this problem, then I replaced the hydro oil with straight water, which is much thicker than oil, and I do not have the hydro leak down anymore. Plus, replacing the fluid in the trans, etc is now free! I just pull up the garden hose and fill er up! I am a genius.
Yep normal. What frustrating to me is during the storage of my BH off the tractor and on a dolly, the stabilizer feet slowly deploy making the BH bigger and harder to maneuver around. Have to connect up to the tractor to raise them up. Careful that you don't park the dolly such that it gets trapped because the legs sagged. I am now using some long cabinet making clamps to keep them upright. Tried some cheap zip ties and they stretched and broke.