Woodsplitter build #2

   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#81  
Wife made me go away for a long weekend. Was good except I kept dreaming about 5gal cans of hydraulic fluid. Ordered a 0-5000 psi gage from Northern.
That was a mistake. 2-3 days to get out of their wharehouse and then UPS to local and UPS drops it at the post office and I get mail around 5pm. 6 days. I should have looked closer at McMaster Carr. I get those deliveries the next day.
Then the Tractor Supply cut off saw. No receipt except CC. SO they say sure we take it back. Exchange or store credit or they will send a check. Cost $39.
SO I am feeling better, NOT good you understand , it is junk. But there are none left of probably 20. HMM 20 coming back at one store. Not my problem.
SO I say ok I will get some other stuff like another 5 gal of hydraulic oil. I think $39 even steven. At the cash register , since I have no receipt, He types in the SKU no and it comes back $25. I say Huh. He says thats what it says, no receipt nothing he can do. OK I got 25 gal of oil for $30 and I cut all my return hose for nothing. I think.
I paid 40 for saw got 25 back 15 out of pocket
5 gal hyd oil 39 used the 25 and another 15 out of pocket
Seems like 30 out of pocket to me but I get confused easy.
Moral of the story SAVE THE RECEIPTS There is only a 90 day return so use it hard fast. Or buy better stuff.
Back to work tomorrow. Wheels on the Power Pac and Welding on everything. When the mail comes, a gage on the power pac and fill it with oil.
I have one fitting I should try to get another 360d out of . IT will see peak psi. But it is a PITA to get at. The first tee at the pump hose out. All the relief valve stuff screws on after that. I have to think on it.
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#82  
Wife made me go away for a long weekend. Was good except I kept dreaming about 5gal cans of hydraulic fluid. Ordered a 0-5000 psi gage from Northern.
That was a mistake. 2-3 days to get out of their wharehouse and then UPS to local and UPS drops it at the post office and I get mail around 5pm. 6 days. I should have looked closer at McMaster Carr. I get those deliveries the next day.
Then the Tractor Supply cut off saw. No receipt except CC. SO they say sure we take it back. Exchange or store credit or they will send a check. Cost $39.
SO I am feeling better, NOT good you understand , it is junk. But there are none left of probably 20. HMM 20 coming back at one store. Not my problem.
SO I say ok I will get some other stuff like another 5 gal of hydraulic oil. I think $39 even steven. At the cash register , since I have no receipt, He types in the SKU no and it comes back $25. I say Huh. He says thats what it says, no receipt nothing he can do. OK I got 25 gal of oil for $30 and I cut all my return hose for nothing. I think.
I paid 40 for saw got 25 back 15 out of pocket
5 gal hyd oil 39 used the 25 and another 15 out of pocket
Seems like 30 out of pocket to me but I get confused easy.
Moral of the story SAVE THE RECEIPTS There is only a 90 day return so use it hard fast. Or buy better stuff.
Back to work tomorrow. Wheels on the Power Pac and Welding on everything. When the mail comes, a gage on the power pac and fill it with oil.
I have one fitting I should try to get another 360d out of . IT will see peak psi. But it is a PITA to get at. The first tee at the pump hose out. All the relief valve stuff screws on after that. I have to think on it.
What was I thinking Full price for oil and $15 out of pocket for saw returned.
So it cost me $15 to cut all my return hoses. I can live with that.
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#83  
My usual couple steps forward and one step back. Put casters on the power pac. Not for off the road speed racing but just to move it around in the shed after forklifting it out there, full of oil. The shed has a concrete floor . Had to drill and tap 16 5/16 - 18 holes to mount the casters. The bolts came with the casters but were not long enough to put nuts on the back. So buy longer bolts and use up 16 nuts , lockwashers and flat washers or tap 16 holes. I went with tap. Still don't have the gage but tracking says it's out for delivery. In the meantime I decided too many threaded fittings in the line to the relief valve. IF I ever had to take anything apart I would be unscrewing pipe fittings for ever. Besides I had to turn the last, or first, depends how you look at it, another 360d, which I did . Would have leaked for sure. So I had to order another fitting 3/4 jic female nut thing , Acts like a union. That will allow the relief valve to come off with out all the rest of the fittings. A lot cleaner.
Then I was going to do some welding but I got distracted by the quick attach latches not working easily. Works better when they are greased. Then I got more distracted by the fluorescent lamps right over my bench going dead. Only 20 years old can't imagine why. Got 2 bulbs down at the Depot, still dead, must be the ballast #$%$#. So then I pulled out the flotation feet under the beam legs and wire brushed and primed. That's it for today.
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2 #84  
Never fails does it :thumbsup:

I always get a kick out of guys (like myself) that want to build a XXXX instead of buying.. After you pay for the materials, screwups and consider what your time is worth... sometimes you gotta wonder if its just better to buy :D But whats the fun in that, eh?:thumbsup:
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#85  
Never fails does it :thumbsup:

I always get a kick out of guys (like myself) that want to build a XXXX instead of buying.. After you pay for the materials, screwups and consider what your time is worth... sometimes you gotta wonder if its just better to buy :D But whats the fun in that, eh?:thumbsup:

I always look at the cost of these things as college tuition I don't have to pay loans on. Pretty good return for the money I think. When did you ever learn anything when you hand over plastic except to keep receipts.
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#86  
All right The pump package is finished Ready for oil I got ISO 46 oil good efficiency between 0 and 60d F. Should be ok. Who wants to split wood colder or hotter. Maybe oil tomorrow and let it go over the relief valve at 300psi for a while. Let all the little bits make it to the filter. Everything coming back from the beam will return through the filter. The casters are really nice for pushing it around.
Rain tomorrow. I can probably weld on the beam just inside the door. Although it will be in the 50's on Friday.
I forgot to mention that the electrical switch is a 2 pole 30a switch . It is the biggest switch I have ever seen that looks like a normal wall switch. Should handle the 20A load with out any problem at all. Currently I have a 220 15A plug on the line cord. I will probably change that to a 30A plug.
The line cord is 12g but pretty short so I will leave that. I am debating with myself on the out let in the shed. I have run my other splitter off a 12g ext cord from a 220 outlet for 10 years. I want to put a more permanent outlet in and I am trying to decide between 10g romex or 3/4 PVC and pull some 10g pump wire through it. It is all 8ft off the ground and under a roof. PVC is the right way. The feed to the shed is 10g and terminates in PVC now.
 

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   / Woodsplitter build #2 #87  
Bit the bullet and use the PVC conduit. If you don't some day you will probably be wishing you had.

Nice build!
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#88  
Put in 18 gal of oil. Turn the pump by hand for a bit. Backed out the relief valve. Plugged it in. Held my breath and turned it on. 500 psi ran for a while.
All seemed good. Took a breath. Cranked up the pressure at 2400 psi the 20A CB popped. Not unexpected. At 1900 psi it runs on the 20A CB. Then I noticed an oil drip. It was coming off an 1 1/4 pipe. I almost had a heart attack BUT it was a 1/8 pipe plug ,second port for the return gage at the filter.
I never even looked at that fitting other than to notice it had some kind of red sealer on it. I have a spare 4 way out on the beam. Reminds me to use pipe dope on the plugs. The return gage read zero as it should.
No pictures you will have to take my word for a line cord, a gage at 1900 psi and another gage at zero
Swapped out the cb to my shed for a 30A. Now I have to wire out there.
I suppose to test the beam near the shop I will have to run it at 1900 psi. OR make an adapter and plug it in my welder outlet. Think I will do that
Rainy day today no outside work.
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2
  • Thread Starter
#89  
Still Raining. Looked through all my electrical stuff. Found 2 plugs and 2 receptacles that are the same as my welder 50A 250v. Thought about it for a while and decided if I want to run the pump at the shop I would plug it in the welder outlet but I needed a 30A extention cord. Looked some more and found 10ft of SO 10g. So now I have a 50A plug on the power pack and a 10ft 10g ext cord with a 50amp connector on each end. Running at the shop is a one time or maybe a couple of time thing. I am not worried about running it on a 50 amp breaker. I have one 50 A receptacle left ,I will use that at the shed with a 30A breaker on it. No harm just a really big plug. I will probably dismantle the ext cord when I am done so it can't be used for a 50A service.
I will run it tomorrow and see if I can get 2700 psi out of it and lock down the relief valve. I was welding today inside , got smoky after awhile. Put feet on the beam legs and some diagonal braces on the legs and did some welding on the log lifter. Pictures tomorrow
 
   / Woodsplitter build #2 #90  
I used to use Autocad but with so many upgrades to new operating systems my Autocad became non compatible. I don't use it enough to pay for one. I tried google sketch bit can't make it do what I want.
Tried Doublecad ,free, but not comfortable with that either. So pencil and paper and some old tricks like cardboard and pivot points.

I've been accumulating some steel and pieces to build a splitter and was reading through all the posts to learn from everyone's experiences, when I saw your CAD comment. Have you seen the freeware AutoCAD alternative called DraftSight? It's by the company that makes SolidWorks, I've used AutoCAD at work for 15+ years and had not kept up with home copies for a while either. Found DraftSight a couple of months ago and seems to have full functionality for whatever I have needed at home.

DWG files with DraftSight - Dassault Systemes
 

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