Description
When your three-point hitch starts creeping down or your loader feels sluggish, dirty hydraulic oil is usually the culprit. Contaminated hydraulic fluid doesn’t just make your tractor perform poorly—it can destroy expensive pumps, valves, and cylinders in a hurry. This hydraulic filter keeps your John Deere’s system running clean and strong, protecting thousands of dollars worth of components while ensuring your implements respond when you need them most.
Key Features
- High-efficiency filtration media captures particles that would damage sensitive hydraulic components
- Heavy-duty construction handles the heat and pressure spikes of demanding farm work
- Direct replacement design means no modifications or guesswork during installation
- Quality materials resist breakdown from modern hydraulic fluids and temperature extremes
Built for Real Farm Work
These John Deere tractors feature sophisticated hydraulic systems that power everything from front-end loaders and three-point hitches to power steering and implement controls. 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. Whether you’re running a front loader, operating implements, or using remote hydraulics for specialized equipment, this filter ensures your hydraulic system delivers consistent power.
Made to Last
The high-flow design maintains proper pressure while the efficient media captures harmful contaminants without restricting oil flow. Regular filter changes prevent the premature wear of expensive hydraulic pumps, control valves, and cylinders that can cost thousands to repair or replace. This filter handles the temperature swings and vibration that come with everyday farm use, keeping your hydraulic system protected 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 filter on hand—hydraulic problems during critical work periods cost more than stocking up on filters ahead of time.




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