Rch
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 648
- Location
- Central Wisconsin
- Tractor
- 1986 Ford 1910 with 770B (FORD) loader, 4 MFWD; 1986 Bolens G214,back hoe,loader,MFWD (Iseki) 21 hp)
Harry,let me see if I got this right: that's obviously a hydraulic pump under the alternator, powered off the front of the crankshaft. The rubber hose with the red paint dabbed quick connect goes to a hydraulic assisted steering valve that the steering wheel, coming down at an angle from the left upper corner(round black 5 cm or so in diameter) I see two hoses connected with banjo connections on top of that valve; does one go to power steering and the other to the rear to run the 3 pth ? That hunk of cast iron those 2 banjo connection hook to may be the power steering priority valve. The pump under the alternator looks pretty herky and maybe puts out 8+ gal /min.
The silverish zinc chromate pipe that hooks into hydraulic pump- is that a return ?, if so from where ?, or an out flow ?, to where ? Is that pump devoted to power steering ? Is there another hydraulic pump, perhaps buried in the transmission case the runs the 3 pth and FEL, if you had one ? The nice thing about a devoted power steering pump is no flucuations in flow/pressure as you are using the 3 pth or FEL, if you had one. That's a way to check whether you have a sperate hydraulic pump for the 3 pth is to turn and raise a load on the 3 pth simultaneously- you can feel the flucations in the steering as the 3 pth steals some flow. Tapping into a devoted power steering to run the snow plow will do the same since there is not any excess flow in the devoted steering hydraulic pump.
There may be a 2nd hydraulic pump buried in transmission(the 8+ gallon a minute baby) and a port for tapping into that on the side of the transmission or on the casting housing the 3 pth cylinder on top of the differential right under the seat. Like I said a tractor with a FEL on it would show were to tap into the hydraulic flow for powering hydraulic implements.
The silverish zinc chromate pipe that hooks into hydraulic pump- is that a return ?, if so from where ?, or an out flow ?, to where ? Is that pump devoted to power steering ? Is there another hydraulic pump, perhaps buried in the transmission case the runs the 3 pth and FEL, if you had one ? The nice thing about a devoted power steering pump is no flucuations in flow/pressure as you are using the 3 pth or FEL, if you had one. That's a way to check whether you have a sperate hydraulic pump for the 3 pth is to turn and raise a load on the 3 pth simultaneously- you can feel the flucations in the steering as the 3 pth steals some flow. Tapping into a devoted power steering to run the snow plow will do the same since there is not any excess flow in the devoted steering hydraulic pump.
There may be a 2nd hydraulic pump buried in transmission(the 8+ gallon a minute baby) and a port for tapping into that on the side of the transmission or on the casting housing the 3 pth cylinder on top of the differential right under the seat. Like I said a tractor with a FEL on it would show were to tap into the hydraulic flow for powering hydraulic implements.