Like I said, I had a 1010 loader with backhoe. On the back of the seat was a push pull splitter valve. The main hydraulic line ran to that valve first, and in normal operation of the loader the valve directed all the flow to the loader valve bank. After backing up to the backhoe and quick couples were hooked up, you pulled up on the splitter valve and the flow went to the backhoe. You did not need to shut it off. Then you could lift the hoe with the outriggers and back into the hangers, and boom it back to put the top pins in. Two minutes tops to hook up the hoe. I never had a 1" quick coupler come appart. I always kept the quick couplers connected on both the crawler and the hoe when not using the hoe, it kept them clean.
I had a log splitter that I could quick couple up to the 1010 and run off the crawler and ran the log splitter with it's own valve like normal just used the 1010 hydraulic at an idle to split wood.
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulics - Cylinder Anatomy - by Curtis von Fange. Let’s make one more addition to our series on hydraulics. I’ve noticed a few questions in the comment section that could pertain to hydraulic cylinders so I thought we could take a short look at this real workhorse of the circuit. Cylinders are the reason for the hydraulic circuit. They take the fluid power delivered from the pump and magically change it into mechanical power. There are many types of cylinders that one might run across on a farm scenario. Each one could take a chapter in
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