Mace Canute
Elite Member
Put the filter in the return line.I'm building a log splitter and am to the point of putting the hydraulic system together. My question is about the return line filter. All I see available from Surplus Center for return line filters are typical canister filters of varying sizes but they all pretty much say max 200 psi operation. How is it possible to put a 200 psi filter on a system that has all other components rated for 3000 psi ???? My novice approach is to put every component rated for the same max psi.
Please help.
The splitter will be : 25 gallon tank, 16 gpm pump, auto-cycle valve, 3/4 in lines, splitting cylinder, log lift valve, 3/8 in lines, log lift cylinder, return filter.
Thanks,
-unixkid
Anything in the suction line has the potential to cause cavitation in the pump, a situation that will cause many times the damage than the odd bit of debris might cause and since the restriction is there 100 % of the time, so will the cavitation it causes.
If you want to have a screen, put one in the in the filler neck. That way you can see if anything was in the oil you added to the reservoir and you can remove it immediately. Putting a magnet in the bottom of the reservoir to catch any metallic particles that may be present never hurts and can always help.
So many people get hung up on filtering the oil before it goes to the pump but the wear particles that are in the oil come from the system, not from the reservoir...doesn't it make more sense to try to filter them out before they get into the reservoir? Besides...you aren't dumping dirty oil into the reservoir that you have inspected to make sure it was clean from the manufacturer, eh.
Back to the filter...the only thing you have to be careful of is that the filter base has a bypass built into it. The bases I have seen have had a bypass pressure of 25 PSI.