John_Mc
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2001
- Messages
- 4,504
- Location
- Monkton, Vermont
- Tractor
- NH TC33D Modified with belly pan, limb risers & FOPS. Honda Pioneer 520 & antique Coot UTV
This has much more to do with the size of the pump, and the viscosity of the oil you're pulling through it, than the engine. My engine pulls over pretty easy, but connect it to a large pump sucking on honey, and it gets real hard to pull that cord.
At just 11 - 13 GPM, this isn't that big a deal. But once you get into 20 GPM territory, it's more of a problem. I went to an electric start engine when I upgraded my pump past 16 GPM, so I can just plug it into my tractor and turn a key to cold start. Once they hydraulic oil (ATF) is warmed up, then it's easy to re-start by pulling the cord.
I never really thought about how much drag the pump puts on starting. I didn't really think about what it does then the valve is in neutral.
I have no idea what hydraulic fluid is in my AmericanCLS AM-25HH log splitter. The manual says "any quality light hydraulic oil." I bought it used. I probably should change the hydraulic oil one of these days. It has a 16 GPM pump, but I have no trouble at all pulling it over even in below freezing weather.