roadhunter
Elite Member
Duplicate

If in fact the attachment is a closed center hyd system, the closed center relief will be on most of the time.
I agree. Rule of thumb is 100 degrees above ambient temp.I don't 175 is to hot, I would ask the dealer. I wouldn't be to concerned unless it went over 200
I agree. Rule of thumb is 100 degrees above ambient temp.
This isnt the best drawing, and AutoCAD crashed before I could save to a better format. Does this look like your machine?
View attachment 447857
Hmm. It's made to go on a tractor so I just assumed it was open center. I'll have to do some research on that one.
CC systems use an 'unloader' to manage flow at full pressure (a pilot operated valve that can 'dump' full flow back to tank when all system valves are 'closed').
CC hyd systems that I'm familiar with(JD) have a stroke control valve that when set pressure(known as stand-by) is reached CC pump simply stops pumping oil IE there is no flow to "dump" back to tank
I cant add anything useful to this discussion except to comment on Tomnoh post. My first thoughts where also that the divider valve might not be plumbed correctly so I looked it up here, Webtec - Hydraulics - Downloads - Literature and it appears to be installed correctly. going off the numbers posted for the valve,2FV2V-, it appears it doesnot have a internal relief, but the next valve, RV2FV2V does have a relief. I can only guess the accuratecy of the numbers posted, but in the event the DV in question is in fact a RV2FV2V with internal relief, it could be possible that that relief is set to high and might need some adjustment. Also in the pdf file of the hydraulic circuit, that design doesnt make sense. No relief between pump and control valves, suggesting maybe a closed center system, but all control valves are open center, a relief valve on the return stroke of the last cyl circuit and the installation of a check valve on the return side after the relief. I dont understand the reasoning. I do realize tho that this is not the actual schematic of the machine in question.
I cant add anything useful to this discussion except to comment on Tomnoh post. My first thoughts where also that the divider valve might not be plumbed correctly so I looked it up here, Webtec - Hydraulics - Downloads - Literature and it appears to be installed correctly. going off the numbers posted for the valve,2FV2V-, it appears it doesnot have a internal relief, but the next valve, RV2FV2V does have a relief. I can only guess the accuratecy of the numbers posted, but in the event the DV in question is in fact a RV2FV2V with internal relief, it could be possible that that relief is set to high and might need some adjustment. Also in the pdf file of the hydraulic circuit, that design doesnt make sense. No relief between pump and control valves, suggesting maybe a closed center system, but all control valves are open center, a relief valve on the return stroke of the last cyl circuit and the installation of a check valve on the return side after the relief. I dont understand the reasoning. I do realize tho that this is not the actual schematic of the machine in question.


I agree, priority flow divider is plumbed as designed, but it is a PRIORITY flow divider valve, meant for another use, not for the intended use in this application. It is meant to assure hydraulic flow to circuit #1 regardless of what circuit #2 does. Circuit #2 gets the portion of flow that circuit #1 does not use. If that is ZERO, then circuit #2 gets ZERO flow. It does NOT just divide flow 50/50.
The flow divider is doing absolutely nothing to reduce your total flow as plumbed. 8gal/min comes out through 1 hose, 8gal/min returns through 1 hose. If the bypassed fluid was returned to tank via a separate hose, it might help some. As was stated above, you need to be sure that the tractor & machine are both either OC or CC systems. It will not work properly with mixed systems.