Description
When your hydraulic system starts acting sluggish or making that whining noise that tells you something’s not right, a dirty filter is often the culprit. When your hydraulic system starts acting sluggish or you notice jerky three-point hitch 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 TISCO hydraulic filter keeps your system running clean and smooth.
What You’re Getting
- 9.02-inch cartridge design provides excellent filtration capacity for demanding applications
- TISCO quality construction that’s built to handle the pressure cycles and contamination of real farm work
- Simple drop-in replacement design—no complicated modifications needed
- Efficient filtration media captures particles and debris before they damage expensive components
Built for Real Farm Work
This filter works across a wide range of agricultural and industrial equipment where clean hydraulic fluid is critical for reliable operation. These David Brown tractors are workhorses for mixed farming—whether you’re cultivating, baling hay, running a loader, or managing livestock. The hydraulic system powers everything from your three-point hitch to power steering, and clean oil is what keeps it all working right. Whether you’re running loaders, operating three-point implements, or powering hydraulic remotes, this filter keeps things working like they should.
Made to Last
TISCO builds this pump to handle the constant pressure cycling and contamination that comes with real farm work. The robust internal components resist wear from dirty hydraulic fluid, and the quality seals keep things tight even when subjected to the heat and vibration of a hard-working tractor. The cartridge construction stands up to temperature swings and pressure spikes that come with demanding hydraulic work.
Installation Notes
This is a standard cartridge filter that drops into most compatible filter housings. You’ll want to drain the hydraulic oil before swapping filters—saves you from making a mess and wasting fluid. Always check your oil level after installation and top off if needed. Keep a spare on hand during busy seasons so a clogged filter doesn’t shut you down when there’s work to do.






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