OP
coloradotrout
Gold Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2005
- Messages
- 390
- Location
- Eastern KS
- Tractor
- JD 4100 HST CUT w/Yanmar 3TNE74 | JD 300 Lawn
Thoughts on these?
Idea noted!If there is an actual crack or hole in the steel line you can measure the outside diameter of the steel tubing and go to the hydraulic supply guys and get a short piece with the correct end you need and a compression coupler
Very inexpensive parts
I know, right. I did that. Even looked at that again last year, and didn't see that to be the issue. I think it's a hairline/pinhole right near the factor braze from the line to the fitting. Pictures forthcoming.Did you simply replace the $1.00 O-ring?
That’s what actually makes the seal of those parts.
Another way to fix it is to replace the steel line with a custom hydraulic hose, or a standard hose with end fitting adapters.I know, right. I did that. Even looked at that again last year, and didn't see that to be the issue. I think it's a hairline/pinhole right near the factor braze from the line to the fitting. Pictures forthcoming.
I should be able to clean up the fitting and an inch or so in the line. Have to get at it from the fitting. Spray some carb cleaner or work a pipe cleaner in there. I don't want to heavily contaminate the fluid that is further down the line.It needs to be clean, you'll have to clean out the inside with solvent and keep oil from getting to the joint. Otherwise it can wick the oil up into the joint and could male things worse.
Once cleaned inside and out with solvent (brake clean, acetone) heat it with the torch to cook any remaining junk out.
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The puck is about 2" in diameter and hollowed out for the fluid and 3 bolt holes. I need to settle on which brazing rod to buy. The lowest temperature that will hold is what I'm thinking!The problem you face with heat is not that MAPP gas is not hot enough, the problem is if you can heat the joint up fast enough. You have a big steel puck to heat up. You need to get it hot fast. A small but hot flame isn't going to be enough. You could use a weed burner to heat
the puck up fast and then go in with the MAPP torch to do the brazing. I suggest you practice on a similar sized piece of steel first to get your technique perfected. Or just go ahead and prove me wrong by just trying your MAPP torch on the joint and being successful. Let us all know how you do.
Eric
Good luck.The puck is about 2" in diameter and hollowed out for the fluid and 3 bolt holes. I need to settle on which brazing rod to buy. The lowest temperature that will hold is what I'm thinking!
Thanks. I can try compressed air all around that area and some carb cleaner with compressed air to see if I can get it clean. The leak is tiny. At idle I get a drop every minute. Under load it's a drop every 10 seconds. The scratches you see in that photo are from a knife to get my JB weld off. The JB was tight against the line, but not so much near the puck. That suggests to me that the leak is right at that joint. Plan B is to clean it up, and lather on another JB weld. I guess plan C would be to replace this with a hose. I have another puck from another engine and that was has a screw on fitting.This is a brazed joint.
View attachment 4419919
If it is leaking at the joint between the puck and line, you will indeed need good luck, just "going over it".
You will need to heat and separate the two to properly prepare the two surfaces for a successful bond.
We all already know there is oil between the two now, that will ruin any chance of seal once heated, or you wouldn't have found that spot to be the source of the leak.