aczlan
Good Morning
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2008
- Messages
- 17,540
- Tractor
- Kubota L3830GST, B7500HST, BX2660. Formerly: Case 480F LL, David Brown 880UE
100% correct.I don't think you are following me, perhaps because I have not been very clear. It is not very obvious unless you understand where the relief valve is positioned in the system, and the hydraulic path to get to it. I think some industrial and construction equipment have reliefs beyond the spools, but not the typical compact tractor.
We are talking open center systems, let's start with that. The cylinders are protected from being over pressurized by the pump via the system relief or the relief on the spool valve if it has one and if it is set lower than the main system. So if you had 15,000 lbs in a bucket that was resting flat on the ground (your gold collection) that was only designed to lift 2000 lbs, sure enough when you tried to lift it the oil would pressurize the cylinders to the relief pressure (maybe 2500 psi) and then spill over the relief. No harm done. But once the spool is centered, the oil in the cylinders has no way of getting back through the closed spool to get to the pressure relief. So take that same load of 15,000 lbs of gold (about half a yard) and set it gently in the already raised bucket and do not touch the joystick. Let's pretend we actually have that much weight that would fit in the bucket and let's forget that we would blow tires and break axles and tip and such. So we have our hands off the joystick and have the loader a couple feet in the air so it is not resting on the ground. We gently put our 1/2 yard of gold into the bucket and what happens? The oil is in a conundrum, if that can happen to oil. It can't work it's way back past the spool except by internal leakage....and that is slow. The pressure relief in small tractors is blocked from cylinder pressure when the spool is centered, so it can't find a pressure relief. It may try to leak past the cylinder pistons/seals, but that is slow just like trying to leak past the spool valve. All of the sudden we have a huge, huge amount of pressure in the cylinders and we either blow hoses, blow fittings, explode a cylinder (surely a hose first) or other carnage like bent cylinder rods that allow the load to fall to the ground. If a cylinder is very far extended when it gets a huge pressure spike, then the rod will often bend before a hose blows. If the cylinder is retracted and it it's strongest position, probably a hose will blow.
I hope I made this clearer and not more confusing.....
Here is an animation showing how the inside of a dual action valve works:
Aaron Z