fishfactor
Gold Member
Can anyone tell me where the braking action comes from on a Brush Cat (Bobcat) rotary mower when you shut off the flow? Is it something in the machine, or the mower?
there is a valve block. When the lift arms are raised about a certain height, the valve is tripped by a lever and it shuts the flow off. It can be disconnected but I don't recommend it. Edit: The block is on the brushcat.
thats interesting......... the hydraulics should work the same no matter what machine its on.......unless your EX is set up for a hammer and the return side hose is open to case drain, hence why it free spins instead of building pressure and stalling untill the relief opens like on your bobcat....
This is correct. The braking is in the valve, uses a cross port releif that allows the motor to coast until the pressure on the retrun side drops low enough to safely stop the blade without damage to the motor or gear box. Some brands may use a motor with internal by-pass circiut that allows coast down, but Bobcat does not. One benifit of the Bobcat motor is ability to use both sides of a double edged blade, if blades get too worn running in one direction, swap the hoses at the motor and motor will rotate opposite direction and cut with the other side of the blade. If running on an excavator as fishfactor described, it was with direct to tank return, in this case it will coast but the motor is spinning without oil flow through it and can eventually cause cavitation wear to the motor.
So should we bypass the valve box when running on the ex? Will this prevent the cavitation?
That looks good dude!! That 6' cutter makes the 42" cutter that I had look very small. Let me know how the shear works on there.
Could you show a few more up close pictures of your adapter? Would like to put one on a 320
Give me some time. We're out of town on a 2 week job right now without it. May get to go home this weekend if the rain comes as forecasted.