Rio_Grande
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2007
- Messages
- 555
Want to add a log lift to my current splitter is there any reason I can't connect two detent valves together? I saw it on a ebay splitter but that don't mean much.
First valve in the series will have to have "Power Beyond" capability. Each valve will have it's own separate return line (which can be tee'd together at some point before the reservoir)
I will have to disagree with this.First valve dont need a return to tank, it will return through the second valve (since its tandem center) when sitting idle. IF first valve also returned to tank, second valve wouldnt develop pressure to work.
With power beyond and a tank line, you have high pressure in, power beyond (high pressure out) and tank (low pressure return to tank)IF the valves have a pressure line in series, but you have a return line between the valves, effectivly making the return a parallel circuit, how will the log lift ever work? Fluid will take the path of least resistance.
If you have a return path that has no resistance between the valves thats where the fluid is going to go instead of making the log lift raise.
Lowering the log lift requires almost no pressure. So if you are extending the splitter ram, the fluid coming out of the rod end port would normally just pass through the tandem center lift valve and return to tank. If you actuate that valve, the returning fluid cycles through that cylinder. IF it is just lowering it wont take much if any additional pressure. If it is raising, the pressure is just additive. May require the pump to stay in second stage longer? or may not make enough and stall the rams, in which case you would just quit cycling the lift until the split finished. But I think it would be rare to be trying to lift the lifter while splitting.
With power beyond and a tank line, you have high pressure in, power beyond (high pressure out) and tank (low pressure return to tank)
The only time fluid uses the tank line is when you are moving a valve (such as lifting the log lifter), the fluid from the other side of the cylinder goes to the tank port.
When the valve is in neutral, fluid comes in via the high pressure port and leaves via the power beyond port. In that case, no fluid flows through the tank port.
Aaron Z
Correct.With power beyond and a tank line, you have high pressure in, power beyond (high pressure out) and tank (low pressure return to tank)
The only time fluid uses the tank line is when you are moving a valve (such as lifting the log lifter), the fluid from the other side of the cylinder goes to the tank port.
When the valve is in neutral, fluid comes in via the high pressure port and leaves via the power beyond port. In that case, no fluid flows through the tank port.
Aaron Z
Want to add a log lift to my current splitter is there any reason I can't connect two detent valves together? I saw it on a ebay splitter but that don't mean much.
But that's not necessarily the case ...As LD1 pointed out, a log lifter wouldnt need much pressure.
Does anybody know what the pressure rating is at the tank port???. I dont know that I have ever seen a rating for that port.
Often its rated for 500 PSI. NOT something you want to put a valve after.
Aaron Z
Until you deadhead the cylinder at the end of its travel and spike the system pressure to the system relief pressure...500psi with a 4in lift cyl would do a lot of work, about 3 tons worth. I still wouldnt be comfortable doing it. Certainly wouldnt want to be in a position where the tank port would see system pressure.
edited to add, the 2in cyl @ 2000psi of Rswyan's will lift the same as the 4in cyl at 500psi. Just for comparison in case someone has a 4in cyl laying around and is now thinking they want to go that route. If its not enough for Rswyan, it probably aint going to be enough for anybody else either.