greg_g
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2003
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Western Kentucky
- Tractor
- JD3720 Cab, 300X loader with 4-in-1 bucket
Yes, twin sump means two places to put two different types of lubricant (in this case gear oil and hydraulic fluid). Common (or single) sump tractors use UTF.
Clearly I cannot speak for what's printed in manuals for Australian FT404s. But here in North America we use gear oil in the gear boxes (front diff/mid-connect/tranny/rear diff) and hydraulic fluid for the hydraulics. UTF in America is generally a 20W equivalent. Our average climate is what typically makes UFT too thick for hydraulics and too thin for gears. Average American Foton owners will use 85W90 (about a 30W equivalent) in the gear boxes and AW32 or ISO32 (about a 10W equivalent) in the hydraulic sump. Extreme northerners may elect thinner, extreme southerners may elect thicker. When it comes to power steering, it's personal preference. A standalone PS pump may have an internal bypass, which complicates the fluid selection. I had to go all the way to 50W in mine - to prevent the pump from overheating in the dead of summer.
//greg//
Clearly I cannot speak for what's printed in manuals for Australian FT404s. But here in North America we use gear oil in the gear boxes (front diff/mid-connect/tranny/rear diff) and hydraulic fluid for the hydraulics. UTF in America is generally a 20W equivalent. Our average climate is what typically makes UFT too thick for hydraulics and too thin for gears. Average American Foton owners will use 85W90 (about a 30W equivalent) in the gear boxes and AW32 or ISO32 (about a 10W equivalent) in the hydraulic sump. Extreme northerners may elect thinner, extreme southerners may elect thicker. When it comes to power steering, it's personal preference. A standalone PS pump may have an internal bypass, which complicates the fluid selection. I had to go all the way to 50W in mine - to prevent the pump from overheating in the dead of summer.
//greg//