rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,560
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
Any system with a recovery jug will have the top rad tank and upper hose full all the time when operating as designed.
I disagree. It's common practice to design the return portion of any flow system so that the return line has less restriction than the pressure line. The easy way to do that is to make the return line a little larger diameter than the feed line. The goal isn't that you are wanting partial flow in the return line, its just that the simple way to design a inexpensive flow loop is to put a low pressure section into it. Everything becomes simpler then. In the case of a radiator, the upper hose and top tank area are part of the return flow.
There are probably exceptions. At least one manufacturer uses full pressure hydraulics with an accumulator, and for all I know there are some coolant systems that do that in tractors, too. So, I'm not saying that all systems are designed that way, but most are. From what we have already seen in this thread, compact tractor design doesn't attract the same level of thoughtful design that is common in other industries.
Maybe there's a hidden benefit here. After all, folks who buy tractors tend to have a long history of modifying and improving them. The obvious need for a fluid level sensor in a rough country machine like a tractor looks like another opportunity for owners to make them better
rScotty