As an fyi I brought this to closure with a new HST I installed plus I added a gauge to watch the HST charge pressure for future peace of mind.
"So it seems the proximate cause was some crud in the fluid that
affected the flow divider piston, which resulted in low charge pressure.
That, in turn, caused cavitation in HST axial piston pump."
Hello all. I just stumbled on this thread while searching under pumps.
I'm really impressed by the rational approach to a mechanical problem....but am concerned that the case for the cause of failure is so weak. Just what is this "crud theory" based on?
I know I'm coming in after the fact, but I've got to say that's sure a lot of well-polished symmetical wear for a little bit of crud to cause. In my experience, wear from crud tends to be more assymmetrical and includes scoring. And cavitation leaves a telltale specific erosion pattern. What the pictures posted look like to me is just excessive wear which usually has a simpler cause: poor metallurgy, poor fits, or poor lubrication.
Metallurgy is easy to test so I'm going to go out on a limb and say that it probably isn't the hardness or alloy of the pump parts because those are obvious enough to leave clues. And of course the fit of the original parts is gone forever.
So if those causes of failure are out, that just leaves the oil itself. Maybe I missed it, but was there ever anything odd about the oil or filter? Any tests done on either? The reason I ask is when I switched to SUDT in my
M59 last year several problems developed immediately, problems which just as promptly went away by switching back to a standard hydraulic oil.
Enjoyed the thread,
rScotty