Description
When your hydraulic system starts getting sluggish, making noise, or just not responding like it used to, it’s usually trying to tell you something—the filter’s doing its job capturing all that dirt, metal particles, and gunk, but now it needs replacing. This hydraulic filter keeps your tractor’s hydraulic system running clean and efficient, protecting expensive pumps, valves, and cylinders from the contamination that causes costly breakdowns. You know how much those hydraulic repairs cost, so a simple filter change is pretty cheap insurance.
What You’re Getting
- Quality filtration media that captures the fine particles trying to damage your system
- TISCO construction built to handle the heat, pressure, and vibration of real farm work
- Direct replacement design that fits properly without modifications or adapters
- Heavy-duty housing that won’t collapse under hydraulic pressure like cheaper alternatives
Built for Real Farm Work
Whether you’re running a loader, operating three-point implements, or powering hydraulic remotes, clean hydraulic oil is essential for reliable operation and maximum component life. This filter handles the demanding conditions that come with everything from daily chores around the farmyard to heavy field operations where your hydraulic system gets a real workout. It’s designed for tractors that put in long hours doing the kind of work that tests equipment.
Made to Last
Modern hydraulic systems operate at pressures exceeding 3,000 PSI, and even microscopic contamination can cause catastrophic failures. A quality hydraulic filter removes metal particles from normal wear, dirt from external contamination, and degraded oil compounds that can damage sensitive components. This TISCO filter is built to handle those conditions season after season without failing when you need it most.
Installation Notes
Filter changes are straightforward, but always let the system cool down and relieve pressure before you start. Always use clean hydraulic oil when changing filters and inspect the old filter element for excessive metal particles or unusual debris. If the system has been contaminated, consider flushing and changing oil along with the filter. Check your fluid level after installation and keep a spare filter in your shop—hydraulic failures during busy seasons cost way more than having a backup on hand.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.