AKfish
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2004
- Messages
- 5,419
- Location
- Alaska
- Tractor
- JD 5115M; JD 110 TLB; JD 4720; Ford 9N; JD X300R
This kind of situation is always gonna be one where you're "2nd guessing" yourself... When faced with the same deal; there's no "absolute" - right way or wrong way - it's just the best one at the moment!
That said - if you've got power steering (still operational) and if the 3pt was still responsive when you got back to the house - there was "some" hydraulic fluid remaining in the tractor. I believe there's an implement pump and a steering pump on your tractor. Both pumps utilize a common sump. If the fluid dries up completely - no power steering, no FEL, no 3pt. (And the pumps would get real hot, real fast.)
While it's possible that you could have caused some damage to the hydraulic pump(s) I think it's equally possible that they're gonna still work when you replace the lost fluid. (Although the performance might be less than what you had previously).
Best of luck.
AKfish
That said - if you've got power steering (still operational) and if the 3pt was still responsive when you got back to the house - there was "some" hydraulic fluid remaining in the tractor. I believe there's an implement pump and a steering pump on your tractor. Both pumps utilize a common sump. If the fluid dries up completely - no power steering, no FEL, no 3pt. (And the pumps would get real hot, real fast.)
While it's possible that you could have caused some damage to the hydraulic pump(s) I think it's equally possible that they're gonna still work when you replace the lost fluid. (Although the performance might be less than what you had previously).
Best of luck.
AKfish