Description
When you notice your John Deere starting to act sluggish in the gears or the hydraulic response getting sloppy, there’s a good chance your transmission filter is doing its job—maybe too well. This critical filter keeps your tractor’s transmission and hydraulic systems running clean and efficient, protecting expensive pumps, valves, and cylinders from the contamination that causes costly breakdowns. A clogged filter restricts flow and puts stress on your whole drivetrain, so swapping it out during regular service keeps everything running smooth.
What You’re Getting
- High-efficiency filtration that captures harmful particles before they damage expensive transmission components
- High-flow design maintains proper pressure while the efficient media captures harmful contaminants without restricting oil flow, preventing premature wear of expensive hydraulic pumps and control valves
- Durable construction built with high-grade materials resistant to hot transmission fluid and hydraulic oil exposure
- Direct replacement that fits your tractor’s existing filter housing—no modifications needed
Built for Real Farm Work
This filter serves John Deere’s popular mid-range tractors used in diverse farming operations from row crop production to livestock operations. These 95-125 horsepower tractors rely on properly maintained transmission and hydraulic systems for loader work, PTO operations, and precision farming tasks. Whether you’re running a 6200 with a hay tedder, a 6400 pulling planting equipment, or a 6020 with a front loader, clean transmission fluid keeps your drivetrain happy and your work getting done.
Made to Last
These advanced hydraulic systems generate tremendous heat and pressure, with modern tractors having hydraulic systems operating at pressures exceeding 3,000 PSI. This filter handles those demanding conditions while maintaining its filtering efficiency. The robust construction stands up to temperature swings and constant pressure cycling that comes with daily farm use.
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. If the system has been contaminated, consider flushing and changing oil along with the filter. It’s a straightforward swap that prevents expensive repairs down the road.






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