Description
When your John Deere’s hydraulic system starts acting sluggish or you notice jerky three-point movement, chances are your hydraulic filter needs attention. A dirty filter restricts oil flow and lets contaminants circulate through expensive pumps and valves—problems that’ll cost you way more than a simple filter change. This replacement filter keeps your hydraulic oil clean and your John Deere running smooth.
What You’re Getting
- Critical protection for expensive pumps, valves, and cylinders from contamination that causes costly breakdowns
- Quality filter that removes metal particles from normal wear, dirt from external contamination, and degraded oil compounds
- High-flow design maintains proper pressure while capturing harmful contaminants without restricting oil flow
- Direct replacement—installs like the original equipment filter
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. The 5R series utility tractors handle everything from loader work to field operations, while the bigger 7R and 9R machines power through demanding applications like heavy tillage, large implements, and harvest operations. These advanced hydraulic systems generate tremendous heat and pressure, making clean filtration absolutely critical for reliable operation when systems operate at pressures exceeding 3,000 PSI.
Made to Last
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 uses quality materials that resist breakdown from hydraulic fluid and temperature extremes, standing up to the demanding conditions of modern farm operations where hydraulic systems work hard all day long.
Good to Know
Replace every 500 hours or annually, whichever comes first, and 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 system failures during critical seasons can cost you more than the price of several filters.






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