I have a 2 John Deere loader cylinder log splitter my dad built 30 years ago. Engine blew up in 1993. We finally got it back from the fella that blew it up. It has a very long stroke, no detent return, marginal cycle times. Thankshe old engine barely did the job (which kilt it constantly and probably murdered it)
It has a large single stage Hydreco pump est 20 gpm and a 7hp Kohler. I bought a worn out 2000 series Cub Cadet tractor and yanked the single cylinder Kohler Command 16 hp engine out along with the fuel system, harness and choke/throttle cables. It may be only 13 useable hp according to the dealership I got it from but says 16hp all over it. The motor does not mate to the old pump arrangement and coupling and we need to cut it off and reweld it.
I just came across a 16gpm 2 stage Speeco hydraulic pump for cheap (have not purchased yet). I should be able to go to the farm store, buy a pump bracket and bolt this pump on no problem. Keeping the Hydreco pump will be more work for dad to reweld.
I have an idea to two stage the cylinders to make cycle times faster. Prince hydraulics sells an RD-1000 sequence valve. That, a line check valve, a few extra hoses, and I have one cylinder that receives all the flow and the other has both ends open to tank, and then under load both cylinders receive flow to the head end. It will work much like a 2 stage pump. So combine that with a 2 stage pump and you have 3 potential stages.
What I'm afraid of: I'll be forced to go 3 stage if I move to the Speeco pump to get good cycle times as the old single stage Hydreco pump which likely flows more. If I just use the old pump and do the 2 stage cylinders, it will cost less. But in general, this year we just need to split some wood. Not having to spend a weekend changing and aligning and welding a pump bracket and chain coupling seems to be worth the price.
The Hydreco pump does not use a standard size pump bracket, it's somewhere between SAE A and SAE B mounting pattern with a deep pilot bore and long shaft that will force me to space it out with an adapter from any standard pump bracket. Also I have no idea what the Hydreco pump actually flows, never got around to emailing the company. I think it could work just fine if we reweld the bracket.
Just wanted to see if you all thought a 16gpm trying to fill 2 3" cylinders was going to work somewhat ideally or was going to be another trade off to an already crusty heap of junk.
Sorry for the long post
It has a large single stage Hydreco pump est 20 gpm and a 7hp Kohler. I bought a worn out 2000 series Cub Cadet tractor and yanked the single cylinder Kohler Command 16 hp engine out along with the fuel system, harness and choke/throttle cables. It may be only 13 useable hp according to the dealership I got it from but says 16hp all over it. The motor does not mate to the old pump arrangement and coupling and we need to cut it off and reweld it.
I just came across a 16gpm 2 stage Speeco hydraulic pump for cheap (have not purchased yet). I should be able to go to the farm store, buy a pump bracket and bolt this pump on no problem. Keeping the Hydreco pump will be more work for dad to reweld.
I have an idea to two stage the cylinders to make cycle times faster. Prince hydraulics sells an RD-1000 sequence valve. That, a line check valve, a few extra hoses, and I have one cylinder that receives all the flow and the other has both ends open to tank, and then under load both cylinders receive flow to the head end. It will work much like a 2 stage pump. So combine that with a 2 stage pump and you have 3 potential stages.
What I'm afraid of: I'll be forced to go 3 stage if I move to the Speeco pump to get good cycle times as the old single stage Hydreco pump which likely flows more. If I just use the old pump and do the 2 stage cylinders, it will cost less. But in general, this year we just need to split some wood. Not having to spend a weekend changing and aligning and welding a pump bracket and chain coupling seems to be worth the price.
The Hydreco pump does not use a standard size pump bracket, it's somewhere between SAE A and SAE B mounting pattern with a deep pilot bore and long shaft that will force me to space it out with an adapter from any standard pump bracket. Also I have no idea what the Hydreco pump actually flows, never got around to emailing the company. I think it could work just fine if we reweld the bracket.
Just wanted to see if you all thought a 16gpm trying to fill 2 3" cylinders was going to work somewhat ideally or was going to be another trade off to an already crusty heap of junk.
Sorry for the long post