6309311
6309311 / 6671025 / 6309312 / 6677153 / 6678696 / 6667688
OE-Equivalent Replacement Quality
IATF 16949 / ISO 9001 / CE / RoHS
50 pcs
7 - 15 Days
12 Months
6309311 / 6671025 / 6309312 / 6677153 / 6678696 / 6667688
Bobcat skid steers and compact equipment using the D-series 6309311 hydraulic lock valve coil construction
Confirm 12v, not stated, lead wire with sealed connector, coil bore and retaining method before installation.
| Availability: | |
|---|---|
| Quantity: | |
6309311 is a hydraulic lock valve solenoid coil for Bobcat skid steers and compact equipment using the D-series 6309311 hydraulic lock valve coil construction. Buyers should confirm the full reference, 12v, lead wire with sealed connector, coil bore and body construction before approving replacement stock.
Specification | Confirmed Information |
|---|---|
Product Type | Hydraulic Lock Valve Solenoid Coil |
Primary Reference | 6309311 |
Cross References | 6309311 / 6671025 / 6309312 / 6677153 / 6678696 / 6667688 |
Voltage | 12V |
Power | Not stated |
Connector | Lead wire with sealed connector |
Insulation Class | F/H |
Application Scope | Bobcat skid steers and compact equipment using the D-series 6309311 hydraulic lock valve coil construction |
MOQ | 50 pcs |
Delivery Time | 7 to 15 Days |
Warranty | 12 Months |
Complete every control point below before a sample or bulk order is released.
Approval Point | Buyer Review |
|---|---|
Reference | 6309311 / 6671025 / 6309312 / 6677153 / 6678696 / 6667688 |
Electrical | 12V; Not stated; verify under load |
Connector | Lead wire with sealed connector |
Mechanical | Compare bore, height, body shape and retaining method |
Machine Evidence | Bobcat skid steers and compact equipment using the D-series 6309311 hydraulic lock valve coil construction |
Separate electrical command, component movement and final machine response so the actual wiring or hydraulic fault is not hidden by parts replacement.
Observed Condition | Recommended Check |
|---|---|
No magnetic pull | Check loaded voltage, ground, continuity and coil resistance. |
Intermittent operation | Inspect terminal retention, lead damage and heat-related winding faults. |
Excessive heating | Confirm voltage, wattage, duty cycle and free valve-stem movement. |
Connector damage | Inspect keying, seals, corrosion and harness side loading. |
Correct coil, no hydraulic response | Inspect the armature, spool, oil cleanliness and machine command. |
When a remote service kit is prepared, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Approve the complete old marking, 12v rating, not stated power reference, lead wire with sealed connector, coil bore, body height and retaining method. A matching voltage alone does not prove fit. Send straight-on connector, top-bore and side-profile photographs with measurements so the replacement is selected from electrical and mechanical evidence.
When warehouse stock must remain voltage-separated, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Measure voltage directly across the energized coil while the machine issues the real hydraulic command. An unloaded harness reading can hide resistance at a corroded terminal, relay or ground path. Compare the loaded result with 12v, record polarity where suppression is present and correct the circuit before blaming a new coil for weak magnetic pull.
When a mixed-voltage shipment reaches receiving inspection, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Power affects current draw, heat generation and available magnetic force. A replacement with another wattage may fit the valve stem yet operate too weakly, run hotter or exceed a controller output. Confirm not stated from the old label or approved specification, then compare warm current and temperature during sample testing before releasing a bulk order.
When contamination is found in the circuit, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Compare pin count, key position, latch direction, cable exit, terminal size and seal arrangement. Similar coil bodies may use a Deutsch, Weatherpack, insert or lead-wire connection that is not electrically or mechanically interchangeable. Photograph the connector face beside a ruler and note any diode or polarity marking before purchasing or adapting the harness.
When warehouse stock must remain voltage-separated, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Store coils in a clean dry area with connector caps or sealed bags, and keep metal particles away from the bore. Separate voltage and connector variants by labeled bin. Retain lot identification and the approved sample so warehouse staff can compare markings and construction before releasing parts to a distributor order or field service kit.
When a mixed-voltage shipment reaches receiving inspection, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Current under the actual voltage provides a practical comparison with the approved sample and can reveal wiring resistance or an electrically different coil. Record cold and stabilized warm values because winding resistance changes with temperature. An abnormal current must be investigated together with voltage, resistance, connector condition and valve movement before the part is rejected.
When contamination is found in the circuit, keep the verified measurements and test result in the service record. Use the full suffix, voltage, wattage, connector, bore, body shape and harness layout as separate controls. A shared base number may cover several constructions or electrical options. Keep a photograph and measured drawing of each approved version, and never combine inventory until the old unit and sample match on every controlled feature.
Send the complete old marking or component evidence, confirmed voltage, machine information, clear photos, measurements and required quantity for a fitment-focused B2B quotation.