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Cat 963 hydraulic issue

ilcorngrower

Active Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2016
Messages
28
Location
Northern Illinois
Today we blew the main hydraulic line that goes from hydraulic tank to the pump. Machine is a 963A 21Z serial number. The machine from the time it blew the line and unloaded the oil was shut off within a minute or so when operator noticed oil pouring out. After we fixed the line (which is a PITA because of that stupid clamp bracket that mounts to the inside of the frame) and I filled the machine back up with oil. The boom raise and lower/bucket functions are really slow and will not pickup a bucket of dirt. Any suggestions of what to check?

Thanks in advance
 

kshansen

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 11, 2012
Messages
11,160
Location
Central New York, USA
Occupation
Retired Mechanic in Stone Quarry
Well a quick check on SIS shows the main hydraulic pump running at an engine speed of 1,100 rpm and working at 1,000 psi would be putting out 19 gallons a minute. At 100 psi it would be 21 gallons a minute. As the tank capacity is only 15.9 gallons if it ran for "a minute or so" leaking it would have been running dry for some time.

My money is the pump has wiped out the trust plates in that gear pump.

And as for that "stupid clamp bracket" that probably is the reason the line did not fail many years ago! I agree hold downs can be a pain to remove and replace but they are there to protect the hose from damage.
 

ilcorngrower

Active Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2016
Messages
28
Location
Northern Illinois
Not sure that the machine ran for a minute could be less. But after running the boom up and down with the new line and oil in it for like 10+ minutes it now runs and works fine. Pulled hydraulic filters to check for metal fines or collapsed filter. After put filters back in and ran it up and down for a little bit worked good. I don't think its possible to get air in the system is it?
 

Nige

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 22, 2011
Messages
29,310
Location
G..G..G..Granville.........!! Fetch your cloth.
Pulled hydraulic filters to check for metal fines or collapsed filter. After put filters back in and ran it up and down for a little bit worked good. I don't think its possible to get air in the system is it?
Aboslutely possible to get air in the system. Did you cut the filter open to check for metal particles in the base of the pleats of the filter media..? If not I think it's highly unlikely that you would have seen anything.
The usual method is to cut out a section of the filter media, squeeze it in a vice to get the oil out, the pull it open and go looking in the bottom of the pleats for visible particles. If you don't see anything, go looking with a magnet, you might be surprised by what it picks up.
 
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