Excellent video Theo. That gland nut was pretty tight. The gland nut on one of my snow plow angle pistons popped out of the tube. I threaded it back in and angled the plow. It popped again. I noticed that the threads in the tube were wiped out. The local Napa store sold plow parts so I went down there. They didn't stock the pistons. Went back to the shop and tapped the gland nut back in the cylinder and put a bead of weld around the nut and tube. Ran that plow for 5 years with no leak! 🤣🤣
LOL hell yeah sometimes you gotta do what you got to do to keep going and sometimes a temporary fix becomes a permeant fix LOL ... thank you for watching
The case 1845 was the easiest to handle, more power as it was direct drive and easy to work on out of any other skid steers out there. They have the most visibility of any skid steer. Especially the new one if they replace the 1845 with. Unfortunately Case discontinued. The 18 series including the 1840, not a bad machine and the wonderful 1845. You just have to do maintenance on that 1845. The only weak spot is your two front rams for your bucket. They will bend and look like a banana. Take them to the machine shop and have them put in a bit stronger metal and you'll never have a problem with the bucket rams.
I full on agree with the Case 1845 was and is one of the best skidsteers ever build. This is my personal machine and use it weekly around the property ... thank you for watching
@@CountryMileGarage thanks for your reply. Yeah I wasn't sure if I needed to have the bucket in a certain position but I figured it should just be down flat on the ground. Thanks again and good informative videos.
Excellent video Theo. That gland nut was pretty tight. The gland nut on one of my snow plow angle pistons popped out of the tube. I threaded it back in and angled the plow. It popped again. I noticed that the threads in the tube were wiped out. The local Napa store sold plow parts so I went down there. They didn't stock the pistons. Went back to the shop and tapped the gland nut back in the cylinder and put a bead of weld around the nut and tube. Ran that plow for 5 years with no leak! 🤣🤣
LOL hell yeah sometimes you gotta do what you got to do to keep going and sometimes a temporary fix becomes a permeant fix LOL ... thank you for watching
Awesome video THEO. Thanks for sharing. Keep the videos coming. Hope you have an incredible night. Much love and RESPECT
Thank you Tim and thank you for watching my friend
Those gland nuts are on there. Looking forward to the series Theo.
I had some stuck ones before but these where something else LOL ... thank you for watching Pat
Good job keeping them running 😊
Thank you and that's the plan ... thank you for watching
The case 1845 was the easiest to handle, more power as it was direct drive and easy to work on out of any other skid steers out there. They have the most visibility of any skid steer. Especially the new one if they replace the 1845 with. Unfortunately Case discontinued. The 18 series including the 1840, not a bad machine and the wonderful 1845. You just have to do maintenance on that 1845. The only weak spot is your two front rams for your bucket. They will bend and look like a banana. Take them to the machine shop and have them put in a bit stronger metal and you'll never have a problem with the bucket rams.
I full on agree with the Case 1845 was and is one of the best skidsteers ever build. This is my personal machine and use it weekly around the property ... thank you for watching
Those gland nuts can be a hour job themselves sometimes
I had stuck ones before but these where something else LOL ... thank you for watching Adam
Do you have a video on removing the tilt cylinder?
No I do not have a video on that. It's pretty easy tho ... thank you for watching
@@CountryMileGarage thanks for your reply. Yeah I wasn't sure if I needed to have the bucket in a certain position but I figured it should just be down flat on the ground. Thanks again and good informative videos.
@@JohnFoster-jz9cz yes if you leave the bucket on just set it down flat and it'll be easy to remove and install