Farmall Guy - The table/catcher after the wedge was the cheapest, simplest, most labor saving thing I ever did to mine. All those pieces that need to be resplit, etc, they're right there. It saves hundreds of 'bendovers' a day -
I have a question, what if you run the tank return side of the first valve to the intake side of the second valve ? Would that work ?Running the valves in parallel does't work with open center hydraulics. The oil would just go to tank through the other valve instead of doing work.
I have a question, what if you run the tank return side of the first valve to the intake side of the second valve ? Would that work ?
GREAT site BTW !!!
Thanks,
Steve
Steve, that would be putting them in series. Yes, it will work, I did mine that way. However, the mfgs. recomend that the first valve have a power beyond port. This port just flows oil back to the tank if it has to. With valves in series, there's a chance of pressure building above what it should. The power beyond valve is supposed to stop this, or give the pressure a place to go.
WidowMaker - That I don't know - I have 2 setups running for years with no power beyond. One on my splitter [3 valves] and on on my sawmill [5 valves] I would guess it's happened, somewhere ? I do know a system with NO relief valve is not good, as I found out years ago when I split a pump in half. The learning curve, you know?
Thats me...love to run my saw plus the noodles make great bedding for my chickens and fire starter for my stove. Mostly though its convenience. When I go after a tree with a large trunk I can do it with just my saws and dump trailer. When I get home its all ready to split easily. I have a tractor grapple but try to avoid long hauls with it because its heavy.Some guys love to run their saws, but me, when I look at those huge piles of 'noodles', all I see is wasted wood.
I would like to ask a question and share my point of view.
First what do you do if the monster round you lifted up to the table doesn't split all the way through? I suspect roll it off to reposition and then lift it back up to try again. For a year now I've discovered its much easier for me to simply quarter up those monsters first on the ground into easy to lift pieces and then split them normally. Maybe the log lift work ok up to 24" but I can't see it on 30" and above diameter stuff. This is why I don't do vertical any longer either.
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So I've heard, but how is pressure going to build above relief valve setting??