jimmysisson
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2005
- Messages
- 2,358
- Location
- W.Mass
- Tractor
- 1993 NH 2120 (the best), 1974 MF 135 (sold, but solid), 1947 Farmall A (bought, sold, bought back, sold again), 1956 MH50 lbt (sold, in 1980, darn it)
Hi all. I have a homemade trailer woodsplitter with a 4" x 36" cylinder, a 7 hp Briggs engine and a 13 gpm Barnes pump. I added a 2x18" cylinder for a log lift/takeoff platform. I have two logsplitter detent valves, one for each cylinder, with return hoses teed, then through a filter and back to the tank. I also plumbed in an hydraulic proportioning valve so the lift cylinder would get the proper volume (it's 'way too fast with full 13 gpm).
My problem is this: slow cycle times. With cold oil, a forward/return stroke takes over a minute. With warm oil, it's still 25 seconds. At low idle, it's about 40 seconds. I'm hoping for about 12-15.
This splitter started in life as a trailer model with no power, using a 22 gpm or so PTO pump on my old Farmall A. That had better cycle times. I decided to self-power it when the Farmall and pump went away and I had this almost-new Briggs engine. I started with a new 11 gpm pump, and it was too slow. 11 gpm was the recommendation from the chart for the 7 hp engine. I bought the 13 gpm pump, and it got a little faster. I made a mechanical stroke limiter for the ram that I can set when I have shorter logs, so that speeds things up a bit.
Here's really the question. The 7 horse Briggs barely sounds like it's under load when I'm using it. When it goes into the second stage of the pump (slower volume/higher pressure) it sounds like it is under no load at all. A lot of splitting is easy and would stay on the higher speed of the pump.
So, I can get (from Northern, source of all this stuff) a 16 gpm pump in the same form factor so it'll bolt right in. That's 'way above the rating for the 7 hp engine, yet at 13 gpm the engine sounds like it barely labors.
Does anyone know whether this little engine would just be bogged down all the time with a faster pump? I hate to spend the $180 (again!) if it won't run, but the slow cycle makes splitting tedious.
I use regular hydraulic oil in this machine. It's only used in the winter, so would synthetic be any better, maybe when it's still getting warm (REAL slow when oil is cold)? I presume that would not change the stroke time.
Any advice? Is there another way to get more speed?
Sorry for the long post. I could probably take a photo of this beast if that would help.
Thank you, Jim
My problem is this: slow cycle times. With cold oil, a forward/return stroke takes over a minute. With warm oil, it's still 25 seconds. At low idle, it's about 40 seconds. I'm hoping for about 12-15.
This splitter started in life as a trailer model with no power, using a 22 gpm or so PTO pump on my old Farmall A. That had better cycle times. I decided to self-power it when the Farmall and pump went away and I had this almost-new Briggs engine. I started with a new 11 gpm pump, and it was too slow. 11 gpm was the recommendation from the chart for the 7 hp engine. I bought the 13 gpm pump, and it got a little faster. I made a mechanical stroke limiter for the ram that I can set when I have shorter logs, so that speeds things up a bit.
Here's really the question. The 7 horse Briggs barely sounds like it's under load when I'm using it. When it goes into the second stage of the pump (slower volume/higher pressure) it sounds like it is under no load at all. A lot of splitting is easy and would stay on the higher speed of the pump.
So, I can get (from Northern, source of all this stuff) a 16 gpm pump in the same form factor so it'll bolt right in. That's 'way above the rating for the 7 hp engine, yet at 13 gpm the engine sounds like it barely labors.
Does anyone know whether this little engine would just be bogged down all the time with a faster pump? I hate to spend the $180 (again!) if it won't run, but the slow cycle makes splitting tedious.
I use regular hydraulic oil in this machine. It's only used in the winter, so would synthetic be any better, maybe when it's still getting warm (REAL slow when oil is cold)? I presume that would not change the stroke time.
Any advice? Is there another way to get more speed?
Sorry for the long post. I could probably take a photo of this beast if that would help.
Thank you, Jim