Description
When your Case CVX or New Holland T7500 starts feeling sluggish on the hydraulics—slow lifting, jerky loader movements, or that annoying whine from the pump—it’s usually telling you the hydraulic filter’s had enough. Clean hydraulic fluid is what keeps everything from your three-point hitch to your loader operating smoothly, and this element stands between your expensive pumps and cylinders and all the dirt, metal shavings, and gunk that wants to tear them apart.
What You’re Getting
- Element-style design that slides right into your existing filter housing for easy replacement
- High-efficiency filtration that captures particles down to microscopic sizes before they can damage components
- Quality construction that handles the pressure spikes and temperature swings of real farm work
- Proper flow rate that keeps your hydraulics responsive without starving the system
- Cross-compatibility between Case and New Holland models simplifies parts inventory
Built for Real Farm Work
This filter element fits the hardworking CVX and T7500 series tractors that handle everything from loader work around the farmyard to heavy field operations. Whether you’re moving round bales, running hydraulic remotes for hay equipment, or using that three-point for cultivation work, these mid-to-large frame tractors put serious demands on their hydraulic systems. Clean fluid means your controls stay precise and your lifting power stays strong when you’re working long days.
Made to Last
Modern hydraulic systems run at high pressures with tight tolerances, so contamination that wouldn’t have bothered older tractors can cause expensive damage quickly. This filter element uses quality media that traps dirt and metal particles while maintaining the flow rates your system needs. It’s designed to handle the pressure cycles and temperature changes that come with demanding agricultural work.
Installation Notes
Most farmers can swap this element during routine maintenance—just make sure the system’s cooled down and relieve any pressure before opening the filter housing. Replace according to your operator’s manual, typically every 500-1000 hours depending on how dirty your working conditions are. While you’re at it, check your hydraulic fluid level and condition. If it’s dark or has that burnt smell, change it along with the filter.






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