I am kicking around the idea of doing a "scratch build" loader/snow plow/whatever of some sort; either articulated or 4 wheel steer.
I am heavily leaning towards a hydraulic drive with wheel motors so I don't have to mess with gears and driveshafts.
I am trying to work through some of the formulae to get a better idea of what sorts of components I would need to make a functional machine, so I can start virtual shopping.
I work with hydraulics, so that part wont be too tough, but I need to know stuff like suggested ground force?
for example, if I use wheel motors capable of 6250 in-lbs and stick on 30" tires, that gives me 417 lbs of force, assuming I am on 2 wheels while digging, 833 lbs of of digging force, or 1666lbs total peak potential pull.....I am guessing I would want more than that from a machine that will probably be over a ton completed. Is 1:1 pull what I should shoot for? higher? do I just pick a desired bucket size and work from there?
any idea what the commercial small loaders use for wheel motors?
Any reason to choose open center or closed center for the hydraulics? I know a variable displacement pump will be much more expensive than a solid Chinesium gear pump.
any engine suggestions? industrial? from a small car?
pros and cons of articulated vs 4 wheel steering (other than than how complicated it would be)? Seams like articulated would keep the turning tires out of the way of the loader mechanism, but be a bit less stable turning.
anything else to consider for this pipe dream that will likely never happen?
I am heavily leaning towards a hydraulic drive with wheel motors so I don't have to mess with gears and driveshafts.
I am trying to work through some of the formulae to get a better idea of what sorts of components I would need to make a functional machine, so I can start virtual shopping.
I work with hydraulics, so that part wont be too tough, but I need to know stuff like suggested ground force?
for example, if I use wheel motors capable of 6250 in-lbs and stick on 30" tires, that gives me 417 lbs of force, assuming I am on 2 wheels while digging, 833 lbs of of digging force, or 1666lbs total peak potential pull.....I am guessing I would want more than that from a machine that will probably be over a ton completed. Is 1:1 pull what I should shoot for? higher? do I just pick a desired bucket size and work from there?
any idea what the commercial small loaders use for wheel motors?
Any reason to choose open center or closed center for the hydraulics? I know a variable displacement pump will be much more expensive than a solid Chinesium gear pump.
any engine suggestions? industrial? from a small car?
pros and cons of articulated vs 4 wheel steering (other than than how complicated it would be)? Seams like articulated would keep the turning tires out of the way of the loader mechanism, but be a bit less stable turning.
anything else to consider for this pipe dream that will likely never happen?