mllkn6
Member
Equipment
L245 DT, front loader, backhoe, bushog, planters, grain drill, fertilizer sprea
The flow volume of a hydraulic pump is dependent on two factors: the physical size of the pump and the speed of rotation. So while it sounds like your new pump is physically bigger, the 540 rpm rotational speed of the PTO may be well below the speed of the original front-mounted pump. Hence the lower output and the slower cycle times.
You can actually measure the GPM output by calculating the volume of liquid required to raise and to lower the arms (they will be different volumes due to the rod diameter) and then time the cycles. Average over 4 or 5 cycles. If it works out to 3.6gpm then you are getting the rated flow out of that pump and can't hope for any improvement. However, if the flow rate is well below the rated capacity, then something must be restricting the flow. For the sake of comparison, my two, 2" diameter x 16" long lift cylinders fully cycled 4 times in 63 seconds when fed with a 3.5gpm pump at full throttle. If yours takes 20 seconds just to fully raise once, then either your cylinders are massive, or there is something wrong in the system.
Thanks, torch,
My cylinders are 2.5" x 30", I used the old 1001, 1002, 1003, method of counting seconds and to be fair when it warmed up it goes down to 15 seconds. The old front pump raised the bucket in about 10 seconds at around 2000 to 2500 RPMs, never did it at full throttle, I try to keep it working around that range when possible. I think the problem is the rear pump is just only 3.6 GMP.
I didn't crank the tractor with the pressure line unhooked, I just turned it over to see if the pump was pumping, which it was. I have blew out all the lines including the metal ones and am going to reinstall the new pump, plus cleaned out the controls. but found nothing blocking the fluid flow.
Thanks, torch.