rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,542
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
Being a little bit scientific can save a lot of time. I'm know I'm just following along here, but if you are going to compare max system pressure, it will help to know how system pressure relates to the load in the bucket.I've maxed out my FEL a few times moving stacks of lumber for a deck and more recently pallets of stone for a walkway that I had to take a few off to get them to lift. But my tractor is not an M59. This is not really scientific but I'm thinking of comparing max system pressure to charge pressure to determine a good setting but I don't even know if the relationship is linear and I'm assuming the type of accumulator would affect the settings as well.
I have a request for quote out for several different type of accumulators. would be nice to have one that is rebuildable but if it is three times the price I will bet on the non rebuildable one since I need two for the loader and one for the 3pt hitch.
In your workshop manual there will be a table of loader lift versus height that will give you a feel for that relationship. It varies with lifter geometry; I'll copy one such below. By solving triangles and roughly approximating the cylinder surface area you can solve for pressure required to do that lift, and the graphed numbers can be used to check your figures.
I think what you will find is that working stationary pressures are not only lower than max, but often far lower. And you can see immediately that geometery has a huge effect. When the loader arms and cylinders are closer to parallel it takes a lot of hydraulic pressure to raise the arms at all.
Road bounce creates pressure spikes that are much higher and faster than the tractor pump's hyraulic system pressures. Measuring them with a fast-reading pressure gauge is far easier than calculating those little monsters. Remember, you are only trying to damp them... not eliminate them. The energy stays the same in the system; the idea is to spread it out over a longer period of time. Make it less abrupt.
luck, rScotty
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