Bird
Rest in Peace
<font color=blue>never seen an HST temp higher than 180 degrees</font color=blue>
Mark, I have (with Amsoil yet), but I may not have been measuring it in the right place, and it was after doing something I've never done before and will probably never do again. Below is part of a message I posted on 07/05/01.
"Alan, I was determined to make the power steering act up if at all possible, so I pushed it to the point of abuse. Have you ever tried mowing a rough pasture in high range, wide open? Nearly beat me to death. But after running it a couple of hours in mid-range with no hint of a problem, I put it in high, pedal to the metal for an hour. Outside temperature was 86 when I started; 94 when I finished. I managed to push the temperature gauge nearly a third of the way up, and when I shut down, I stuck my temperature probe to the bottom of the tank through the dipstick tube and the hydraulic oil peaked at 210 degrees. Instead of mowing laps around the pasture, I went back and forth from one end to the other, so I was spinning the wheel all the way to the locks doing 180s to the right at one end and the left at the other end. I thought once I felt the power steering starting to catch a bit, but then concluded that it was just the front wheels bouncing on that rough ground. I'd say there must be something different about yours; just don't know what it might be."
Bird
Mark, I have (with Amsoil yet), but I may not have been measuring it in the right place, and it was after doing something I've never done before and will probably never do again. Below is part of a message I posted on 07/05/01.
"Alan, I was determined to make the power steering act up if at all possible, so I pushed it to the point of abuse. Have you ever tried mowing a rough pasture in high range, wide open? Nearly beat me to death. But after running it a couple of hours in mid-range with no hint of a problem, I put it in high, pedal to the metal for an hour. Outside temperature was 86 when I started; 94 when I finished. I managed to push the temperature gauge nearly a third of the way up, and when I shut down, I stuck my temperature probe to the bottom of the tank through the dipstick tube and the hydraulic oil peaked at 210 degrees. Instead of mowing laps around the pasture, I went back and forth from one end to the other, so I was spinning the wheel all the way to the locks doing 180s to the right at one end and the left at the other end. I thought once I felt the power steering starting to catch a bit, but then concluded that it was just the front wheels bouncing on that rough ground. I'd say there must be something different about yours; just don't know what it might be."
Bird