This is the best video for these pumps. I am not a Deere guy but i just bought a 535 and still learning how to run these. Glad you took the time to make this video!
Well I spoke too soon. Neither the manual pull on rope or baling will trigger the twine arm. The belt is engaged when the door opens but the arm doesn't move. Any suggestions before we change out the pump?
@@hillbillylivestock4162 crack one of the lines off the pump to see if it has pressure. Sometimes if oil level was low you have to get air out of the system by bleeding it
So crazy quesiton, I bought a 430 baler a few months ago, is it supposed to start wrapping on it automatically, or do you have to pull the string to start the twine arm
What advi? what advice do you have fir when the twine arm stays in the right hand position till you yank the actuator plunger to the right to trip the arm into returning to the home position. Sometimes it runs fine and sometimes you have to manually trip the arm every bale
How did you prime the new pump after you installed it? We just installed a new pump on our 535 but now the twine arm won’t engage even when the belt does?
We've had the pump rebuilt twice and it still only has a trickle of pressure .you can cap it off with your thumb .belt is tight not slipping is it a low pressure pump?
I have a question - the bale size, or the manual pull causes the latch to trip and engage the belt that drives the twine arm pump. - I understand that part, but what causes that latch to reset and disengage the idler pulley so the pump shuts off?
Thanks. I don’t think mine bypasses after ejecting a bale and closing the hatch. The twine arm stops moving etc, but the latching mechanism never relatches to disengage the pulley, so the pump is constantly running.
@@obieacres4676we finally fixed it today! The latch connects to a spring, which connects to a rod that goes up. That rod has a screw and nut that can be adjusted up and down. We adjusted it down giving the latch more slack and it finally latched when the gate closes.