k0ua
Epic Contributor
I;m impressed a 1980 GM would even do 160,000 miles even if towed. You have to omit that that dirty trans worked even with all that junk in it. You sure that was a TH-400??? in 82?
Sorry, 1972 not 82..
I;m impressed a 1980 GM would even do 160,000 miles even if towed. You have to omit that that dirty trans worked even with all that junk in it. You sure that was a TH-400??? in 82?
Sorry, 1972 not 82..
I'm even more impressed. Snow coming your way papaya boy.:laughing:![]()
On an interesting side note, I bought an old used 82 Oldsmobile once ,,, no mention of ever having changed the automatic (turbohydramatic 400) transmission fluid. ...
I don't think that's entirely true, at least not with motor oil. As I understand it, in motor oil, the molecule chains get chopped up (sheared) over time compromising viscosity. Of course, I could be misinformed.
No they are not useless. They are the only thing that keeps anything alive because of oil not being changed and all the crud coming from the gears and brake discs on these machines. Wonder why almost all industrial machines have separate Hyd oil and trans reservoirs. For longevity. Anyway I will almost bet the primary (Suction) filter is 10 micron and the hydrostatic filter probably is the same or a little less. All the units I build have 5 micron absolute on the suction and a 2 micron off line filtration. They last. But the 2 micron filters have to be changed frequently. By the amount of complaining about the pressure side filter being expensive I highly doubt it would get changed enough. So the mfg chose the lesser of 2 evils. A little dirtier oil than starving the hydrostat which results in almost immediate failure. So back to the begining, I plan on having this unit for more than 2000 hours so the oil got changed. Sad to say but most of these little tractors never see 2000 hours, so I guess in that case the change may not be worth it. And with that reasoning the engine oil may not need changing either? CJ
I hear you, and partially I don't. From what I know, micron ratings of filters, is an average of hole size. That being, some are larger, some are smaller. The statistics come in to play as to how many round trips a given volume of oil makes through a given filter. A 20 micron filter can trap a 5 micron dirt particle. The question is, of statistically, how many round trips will have to take to get wedged in the <5 micron hole vs passing through the larger holes. This is where I would question the purpose of a 50 hour change ( how many round trips did the dirt already do through the system in 0-50 hours ? ), vs spending the money otherwise on a filtration system that actually works. If the dirt is visible, I doubt is <20 microns.
Then again, you posted of a machine that benefited from a custom filtration system. Was the Mfg notified? Why was it only this machine? Normally filtration is on the return low pressure side, not the high side.
NUFF SAID about the mechanics/physics of strainer/filter engineering. Ron