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Hi Robert Lesterson, I want to help you with your question, but I need more information from you. Can you please add details in the comment box? You replaced one hose and now it lifts the plow but it wont allow it to release it down? How many hoses does it have and why did you replace the one hose? Did you bleed it?Hi Robert Lesterson, I want to help you with your question, but I need more information from you. Can you please add details in the comment box? You replaced one hose and now it lifts the plow but it wont allow it to release it down? How many hoses does it have and why did you replace the one hose? Did you bleed it?
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Likely air imulsfying oil via a leak. Could be a hose, fitting, or cylinder seal. Wash away excess oil with a pressure washer, raise plow, shut off and wait. Should drip oil if dropping in just a few minute. Trace leak.
Are we talking about a snow plow that is connected to the front of a vehicle? I would check to see if there was an obstruction in the hoses that operate the right to left movement. Also see it there is something jammed in the plow limiting or restricting its movement.
What you describe sounds like the heater valve. It is used to shut off coolant flow to the heater core when the heater is not turned on. If it is leaking, replace it.
Dis you check the hydraulic fluid in the pump? If the fluid is low, you probably have a broken hose or a blown seal on one of your rams. If the fluid is full, you probably have a bad pump.
Find the two hoses going into the firewall behind the engine. Most likely black and as big around as a man's thumb. As soon as the engine gets warm, stop the car open the hood and feel the hoses. If one is warm and the other cold you have a blocked heater core. After 24 years a heater core is allowed to go bad. This is fixed by replacing the heater core. If the hoses are already tied into each other with a short piece of metal pipe, someone already divined that the core was plugged and removed it from the system. Move way down south.
there is a rubber hose in the back of your machine that has a hole in it. Mines did the same thing. I removed the back took of the hose just yesterday and now I have to find a dealer that sales the hose and replace it.
I had problems with a similar truck,a 1998 GMC diesel after checking to make sure the control cables were operating the blend door and blowing the mess of the heater core,I replace the thermostats.Still no heat turns out there was a small amount of debris collecting in the fitting for the inlet hose at the thermostat housing after removing it and blowing out the lines the heat was fine.
Hi Robert Lesterson, I want to help you with your question, but I need more information from you. Can you please add details in the comment box? You replaced one hose and now it lifts the plow but it wont allow it to release it down? How many hoses does it have and why did you replace the one hose? Did you bleed it?
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