Description
When you’re putting in long days running a loader, cultivating fields, or pushing hard during harvest, the last thing you need is hydraulic system trouble. This critical 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. 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. If you’ve noticed sluggish hydraulics or seen metal particles in your old filter, it’s time to swap this one in.
What You’re Getting
- 235mm length designed to handle high-flow hydraulic systems on these big tractors
- Quality filtration media that captures metal particles from normal wear, dirt from external contamination, and degraded oil compounds
- Heavy-duty spin-on design that handles the pressure spikes and flow demands of modern hydraulic systems
- Direct replacement filter that fits right where your old one came off
Built for Real Farm Work
These John Deere and Case tractors feature sophisticated hydraulic systems that power everything from front-end loaders and three-point hitches to power steering and implement controls. John Deere 6000 and 9000 series tractors are equally capable, powering through harvest seasons and heavy field work. The Case Magnum series tractors are built for big operations where hydraulic reliability can’t be compromised. These advanced hydraulic systems generate tremendous heat and pressure, making clean filtration absolutely critical for reliable operation. Modern tractors have hydraulic systems operating at pressures exceeding 3,000 PSI, and even microscopic contamination can cause catastrophic failures.
Made to Last
This filter is built to handle the demands of modern farm hydraulics where system pressures are higher and tolerances are tighter than ever before. The robust construction stands up to temperature swings, pressure cycles, and the vibration that comes with field work. Quality materials ensure the filter element maintains its integrity and keeps doing its job season after season.
Good to Know
Replace every 500 hours or annually, whichever comes first. During heavy-duty operations like hay season or harvest, check filter condition every 250 hours. Always use clean hydraulic oil when changing filters and inspect the old filter element for excessive metal particles or unusual debris. Keep a spare on hand—hydraulic failures during busy seasons cost way more than having a filter ready to go.






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