Was able to rebuild the spool valves with no problem. Did the top valve first, lift spool, didn't remove the spring and bearings in this one, just cleaned and replaced oring square cut seal. Had slightly larger lip on one edge of the seal. Large lip towards valve body. Diff color from original but measured the same. Extra orings in kit for other applications. Used regular grease as prelube for entire project. Cleaned all parts. Then pulled the tilt spool apart, one of the ball bearings were stuck in the end, used a drill to ream out the hole and emery cloth to clean up the ends until they would drop through the hole. Small HF lock joint pliers, ground a grove in the tip of both sides, grease to hold the bearings in place on the pliers while compressing them into the spool valve. Slipped the cover over the 2nd time I tried it. New oring large edge towards the valve body. Then installed the spool valves into the valve body with no problems, had to turn them back and forth to get the seals to seat into the valve body correctly. Nice tight fit. Reassembled the rest of the valve parts, I used the original screws as I had cleaned them rather than the ones in the kit. Unfolded the fuel fill hose and rotated the valve body back into place, tightened up mounting bolts. Small plate in the bottom is worthless, too small to get a wrench in to remove bottom hose. To replace that hose need either a special wrench, make the hole bigger or pull the entire hose and valve body out. Reinstalled the fuel fill top with a regular hose clamp. Pulled what I believe are called the "case filters", a copper, pebble kind of filter for large particles. First side no problem, found about 6 tiny pieces of metal, looks like start up crapola from machining. Cleaned then reassembled. Pulled 2nd side that is hooked to the hydraulic pump and a huge dump of hydraulic fluid came out and hit the floor. What a mess…. Cleaned that filter too and it had perhaps 3 little scraps of metal in it. I've never cleaned or changed these in the 20 years that I've owned the machine. Again looked like machine particles from when it was made. Re-installed all the hard lines onto the valve body. I sprayed each with carb cleaner to clean the dirt particles from the orings. Each hard line unit had tiny little O-ring in the compression fitting tip. I didn't replace any of them. Will be surprised if a couple of them don't leak. So, cleaned each one with carb cleaner and then re-installed all lines to valve body, huge PIA. Trick was to loosen the hard line hold down bracket on the drive side of the machine. It allowed just enough movement to pull the lines off the valve body to allow rotation to remove the spool valves. I had to use a lock washer under the 3" cap bolt, hold down bracket, so I could lock it in place with vice grips while tightening the nut, cheesy engineering. Didn't have a new hex bolt in house to replace old one.