Tractor idiling running woodsplitter

   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #11  
People over tend to spend loads of hours splitting wood with the tractor barely above idle, without any issues.


Good grief, I just spent 5 and a half minutes watching someone else split wood.....

Looks like good firewood, though. Wish we had that kind of hardwood here.
What kind of wood is hard and twisted like that? Maybe apple or olive?
It looks near to impossible to split those pieces with an axe.

rScotty
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #12  
good grief. i wish i knew this was a problem....ive been doing it for 26 years, no issues. now that i know it can be an issue, maybe i should stop.
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #13  
Good grief, I just spent 5 and a half minutes watching someone else split wood.....

Looks like good firewood, though. Wish we had that kind of hardwood here.
What kind of wood is hard and twisted like that? Maybe apple or olive?
It looks near to impossible to split those pieces with an axe.

rScotty
Cork Oak. We've some tough to split stuff over here.
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #14  
good grief. i wish i knew this was a problem....ive been doing it for 26 years, no issues. now that i know it can be an issue, maybe i should stop.

Or maybe not. I hate to say this GRS, but it could be too late for your tractor.

After all, what happens if you stop doing that now and don't do it again for the next 26 years? Then if something untoward happens you still won't know what caused it....

Maybe it makes more sense to just make something up and try to believe it.

rScotty
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #15  
Good grief, I just spent 5 and a half minutes watching someone else split wood.....

Looks like good firewood, though. Wish we had that kind of hardwood here.
What kind of wood is hard and twisted like that? Maybe apple or olive?
It looks near to impossible to split those pieces with an axe.

rScotty
Not so sure about "hardwood" right now.... Have a 22 Ton splitter and put a white oak round (about 12 X 16) in splitter, ram came in contact with round, ram stopped moving, motor grunted.... Round popped straight up about 12 inches and contacted with my hand, now have splint on thumb after going to ER to have dislocated thumb reset..... What I did learn is softwood splits easy vs hardwood and if log is tellin splitter it "ain't going to happen" to back off splitter...
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #16  
Ignorant question...

someone does work at lower rpm...how do they ascertain that they've wet stacked or not? cant see cylinders, engine isnt talking... ??
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #17  
Ours is happy doing basic backhoe work building stone walls all afternoon running right around 1200 RPM. I call that a "fast idle" amd it is 50% faster than what you are doing, but still considered low RPM. Been doing that on and off for days at a time as needed for a decade now.

BTW, our motor does seem to turn the oil black faster when running at fast idle. To combat that, I use a premium synthetic oil and OEM engine filter. Both get changed regularly .... every year or so.

Same here doing stone walls, and close in digging next to a pipe/house wall always run 12-1300 RPM for finer control of the BH.

Also I have a 3PT Wood splitter I connect to the FEL and run the lines to the BH connection and run at 1200 RPM for decent flow cycle time is "about right" for the way I work.

Yes the oil turns dark faster but I change every 100 hrs and use Rotella

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   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #18  
OLD diesels are what I saw wet stacking and that was MANY years ago, it was a D-7 CAT. I've NEVER had even one of my diesels do it, and I've run some of them for hours and hours at low RPM.

When I use my 3-point splitter, I usually run the diesel at 1200 or so RPM, just to get a little more speed though.

As far as I'm concerned, it's a non-issue.

SR
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #19  
Doubt RPM will have much effect on pressure, but it will have effect on hydraulic flow, that relates to speed of operation....
Yes, and it's very dependent on tractor and splitter. With my 3 point splitter I find speed increases until I get to about 2400 rpm but going on to redline (3200) doesn't matter. Back on the farm we had a splitter we ran off the tractor at idle but it was a 100 HP tractor so it was overkill.
 
   / Tractor idiling running woodsplitter #20  
Ignorant question...

someone does work at lower rpm...how do they ascertain that they've wet stacked or not? cant see cylinders, engine isnt talking... ??

OH... Good Question.
Modern engines don't do it much if at all but older diesels did - especially if cold or running too slow. And also when burning heavy #2 diesel fuel.
When it happens, you won't forget it.
The engine will cough about twice and then spit a load of black wet sloppy half burned diesel blobs out the exhaust and up into the air to shower you and the work.
 

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