C Steffens
ArboristSite Lurker
Hi everyone,
First post and new to the group. Hope you guys can help.
A few weeks ago I inherited an old wood splitter with the following specs:
8 hp Briggs engine 319 cc,
4 inch cylinder with 2 inch rod,
24 inch total displacement when rod is extended,
And a Viking pump with unknown stages or gpm.
I used the splitter for a few hours and it seems so do fine except with some gnarled oak that it struggled with. The pressure gauge at max struggling showed 2000psi during these times.
After the afternoon of splitting I noticed the pump was leaking a little bit and not being able to tell it's size, I figured it might be a good time to replace it. I purchased a 2 stage 16 gpm Haldex pump from Northern. Today I changed out the pump, replaced 3 hydraulic hoses (badly cracked) and fired it up. I ran it for about 15 minutes to purge any air back to the reservoir. And went
forward and back half a dozen times for good measure.
But to my amazement, when I tried to split that gnarled oak from the previous weekend it could not split it. And the strange part is that pressure gauge only ever ready about 900 psi! How is this possible? My understanding in looking at the specs on the Haldex 2 stage 16 gpm is that it should produce 3000 psi during the second stage when the splitter is struggling with a piece of wood.
So that's my quandary. Hope I did something wrong because if 900 psi is normal, on this 16 gpm Galdex pump, I'll go back to a leaky Viking pump with 2000 psi any day of the week.
Thanks in advance for the help and replies.
Chris
First post and new to the group. Hope you guys can help.
A few weeks ago I inherited an old wood splitter with the following specs:
8 hp Briggs engine 319 cc,
4 inch cylinder with 2 inch rod,
24 inch total displacement when rod is extended,
And a Viking pump with unknown stages or gpm.
I used the splitter for a few hours and it seems so do fine except with some gnarled oak that it struggled with. The pressure gauge at max struggling showed 2000psi during these times.
After the afternoon of splitting I noticed the pump was leaking a little bit and not being able to tell it's size, I figured it might be a good time to replace it. I purchased a 2 stage 16 gpm Haldex pump from Northern. Today I changed out the pump, replaced 3 hydraulic hoses (badly cracked) and fired it up. I ran it for about 15 minutes to purge any air back to the reservoir. And went
forward and back half a dozen times for good measure.
But to my amazement, when I tried to split that gnarled oak from the previous weekend it could not split it. And the strange part is that pressure gauge only ever ready about 900 psi! How is this possible? My understanding in looking at the specs on the Haldex 2 stage 16 gpm is that it should produce 3000 psi during the second stage when the splitter is struggling with a piece of wood.
So that's my quandary. Hope I did something wrong because if 900 psi is normal, on this 16 gpm Galdex pump, I'll go back to a leaky Viking pump with 2000 psi any day of the week.
Thanks in advance for the help and replies.
Chris