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Harry Ferguson Tractors Discussion Forum
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1948 TEA 20 Hydraulic lift

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Jim Shier

10-29-2007 09:36:14




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I Just bought a 1948 Ferguson model TEA-20 and on the right side of the transmission there is a round plate with the transmission oil dip stick in it. There is a cast metal part that sticks out from this plate,which has a short hydraulic hose that goes from this casting to the right front corner of the top cover plate under the seat. I was wondering if this is the hydraulic oil supply from the pump inside the gear box to the lift cylinder and I was also wondering if I might be able to tap into this hose to run a three point hitch hydraulic wood splitter. any information would be appreciated thanks JTS

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Jim W

10-31-2007 20:30:18




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 Re: 1948 TEA 20 Hydraulic lift in reply to Jim Shier, 10-29-2007 09:36:14  
The hose is a retrofit that someone has put there. Inside the transmission case, there is a vertical metal tube that supplies hydraulic pressure to the lift cover from the pump. Often people will "tap in" to the hydraulic system at that upper right front corner to run something like a front end loader. However the rear lift arms would still operate, and so people tie them down to the rear axles with heavy chains so that the front end loader will operate instead. (You need to, as once the rear lift arms get to the top, a valve inside then stops the pump from supplying hydraulic pressure.)
So to use a log splitter, you can tie down the rear lift arms and use the hose from the upper front right corner of the lift cover, and just plug the leftover hole in the side cover with the dipstick.
Having said all this, the pump in the tractor will give you very slow cycle times on a splitter of any significant size.
Jim

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