bumperm
Veteran Member
Okay, "gage vs. gauge" notwithstanding, there's clearly some confusion going on here . . . I only have a few active brain cells left, so don't want them all in a tither over this :c).
On my B3350 and BH77 hoe: with the hoe off, there's a "power beyond" hose to plug into a fitting on the tractor, this is part of a series loop, dumping the hydraulic fluid back into the reservoir (if I understand this correctly). Routing this hose through the backhoe doesn't change a thing, as long as no valves are moved on the hoe . . . the fluid simply routes through the hoe and back to the tractor's reservoir, right? When one moves a lever on the hoe, then the fluid gets pressurized as it's diverted into a cylinder to do work. Any relief valve on the hoe itself, will only bypass back into the original hose going to the tractor's reservoir - - it would thus have no bearing on any work (pressure build up) being done by any other hydraulic cylinder on the tractor. A relief valve on the hoe, if set lower than the main relief valve on the tractor, would not bypass before the tractor mounted relief if the hoe was not in operation (i.e. the hoe itself, when not being used, is bypassing all the fluid back to the tractor and thus experiencing no pressure build up to speak of).
If this ain't the case, I'm lost!
bumper
On my B3350 and BH77 hoe: with the hoe off, there's a "power beyond" hose to plug into a fitting on the tractor, this is part of a series loop, dumping the hydraulic fluid back into the reservoir (if I understand this correctly). Routing this hose through the backhoe doesn't change a thing, as long as no valves are moved on the hoe . . . the fluid simply routes through the hoe and back to the tractor's reservoir, right? When one moves a lever on the hoe, then the fluid gets pressurized as it's diverted into a cylinder to do work. Any relief valve on the hoe itself, will only bypass back into the original hose going to the tractor's reservoir - - it would thus have no bearing on any work (pressure build up) being done by any other hydraulic cylinder on the tractor. A relief valve on the hoe, if set lower than the main relief valve on the tractor, would not bypass before the tractor mounted relief if the hoe was not in operation (i.e. the hoe itself, when not being used, is bypassing all the fluid back to the tractor and thus experiencing no pressure build up to speak of).
If this ain't the case, I'm lost!
bumper