scrappy isb67
Gold Member
Truck mounted plows are plumbed like this all the time. On my personal plow, my work plow, as well as the plow on the loader and three dump trucks with plows at work. All the articulated loaders that I have ever run do the same thing for steering. If your worried about it, how about two single acting cylinders? When one is extending, it is forcing the retraction of the other. The valve will take care of the flow of fluid.
but every example you mention above are mechanically syncronized! In th OP's case there is no easy way to mechanically syncronize them.
OP, what exactly are you trying to steer? I have a couple ideas but I need to know what exactly you are working with.
on a conventional vehicle steering setup the Master/Slave setup I mentioned in my previous post might work OK if the inside(of the turn) cylinder is the master(AND that cylinder extends to make that turn), it would simulate ackerman angle.
ackerman angle is there to compensate for the different turning arcs for a vehicle in a turn where the inside wheel has to turn more than the outside wheel.
the other option is a pair of balanced cylinders. with flow dividers you are still going to have issues with one turning faster one way and slower the other way with unbalanced cylinders.