I don't believe it because I understand how the system works, and what you describe equates to "cartoon physics."
Oil heats up faster when it's pumped under pressure. If you just hook a hose between the two ports, and tie the lever back, very little pressure is developed and very little heat is generated. The oil just blurps out the top hole and runs back in the bottom hole, or vice versa.
In order for your scheme to work, you'd need a restrictor in the hose. That's a fitting with a tiny hole through it instead of a full pipe. They make them in straight hose couplings, and elbows.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Farmall M - by Staff. H so that mountable implements were interchaneable. The Farmall M was most popular with large-acreage row-crop farmers. It was powered by either a high-compression gas engine or a distillate version with lower compression. Options included the Lift-All hydraulic system, a belt pulley, PTO, rubber tires, starter, lights and a swinging drawbar. It could be ordered in the high-crop, wide-front or tricycle configurations. The high-crop version was called a Model MV.
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