fattyfat1
Silver Member
i have seen many 3pt. logsplitters that use tractor hydraulics, but do they make one where the PTO drives a hydraulic pump so you don't have to use the tractors system?
fattyfat1 said:i have seen many 3pt. logsplitters that use tractor hydraulics, but do they make one where the PTO drives a hydraulic pump so you don't have to use the tractors system?
I've never once heard it said that splitters are hard on tractor pumps. I can't imagine why they'd be any better or worse than any other hydraulic requirement.fattyfat1 said:nosliw, i agree 100% but i have heard that log splitters are very hard on tractor pumps and most take a hydraulic capacity of 11 gal. per minute. my tractor is small with only 5.2 gal. per min.
[I've never once heard it said that splitters are hard on tractor pumps. I can't imagine why they'd be any better or worse than any other hydraulic requirement/QUOTE]
Most things your tractor pump powers are fairly intermittant giving the system some cool time. And most tractors don't have much hydraulic reservoir volume. A splitter is very demanding on a pump an can create gobs of heat. The factory splitters sometimes have as little as 5 or 6 gals of fluid and after a few hours of splitting in temps above 50 degrees you can't touch the cylinder or tank. Imagine that heat on the fluid shared by the tranny. A separate pump and right sized reservoir will make a system capable of running year around and years to come without undo wear and tear on the tractor. And then theres always the issue of most CUT's don't have very large pumps to begin with.
I think you're using an unreasonably small frame of reference. A TPH splitter does in fact represent intermittent use to the tractor's hydraulic system. It's only pumping under pressure while the cylinder is being extended. Pressure's relieved on the return stroke. Fresh (cooled) oil is picked up for the next pressure stroke.wkpoor said:Most things your tractor pump powers are fairly intermittant giving the system some cool time. And most tractors don't have much hydraulic reservoir volume. A splitter is very demanding on a pump an can create gobs of heat. The factory splitters sometimes have as little as 5 or 6 gals of fluid and after a few hours of splitting in temps above 50 degrees you can't touch the cylinder or tank. Imagine that heat on the fluid shared by the tranny. A separate pump and right sized reservoir will make a system capable of running year around and years to come without undo wear and tear on the tractor. And then theres always the issue of most CUT's don't have very large pumps to begin with.
fattyfat1 said:nosliw, i agree 100% but i have heard that log splitters are very hard on tractor pumps and most take a hydraulic capacity of 11 gal. per minute. my tractor is small with only 5.2 gal. per min.
MossRoad said:Go look at all those log splitters sitting in front of TSC or any home improvement store. They put out nowhere near 11GPM. They only have 6 or 8 HP engines. Our PT425 tractor puts out 8GPM at 2500psi and that is with a 25HP engine.![]()
montanaman said:Not exactly true. The gas engine splitters have a two stage pump and do have pretty good GPM but not while building pressure. They can get the ram out there pretty quick but once it hits the log, one stage of the pump shuts down and they go into low flow, high pressure mode, so to speak.
I have to agree that the TPH splitter shouldn't present any big problems to a tractor hydraulic system. If your tractor is one that barely has hydraulics to begin with and very small tank, then a PTO would be worth thinking about and it will no doubt be faster.
I guess I'm getting old because I've used a TPH splitter on a tractor with a 5 gallon pump at about half throttle and after about 20 minutes of working, it's as fast as I want it to be!
I also agree that on must logs, the amount of time there is much pressure on the hyd system is not too long. There is a lot of cylinder travel time where the fluid is just moving the cylinder with little to no load.
I check the hoses on mine about the time when I'm done using it and they have never been above just warm.
Ken