Hi,
Please help me understand a few things, and answer a few questions.
When talking about cycle time, is it from the fully retracted position, to fully extended, to fully retracted, or, is it from a couple inches before the log, until the log splits, and then back?
I got ahold of an old 3 point log splitter.
It has a cylinder that is about 30" long.
The cylinder outside diameter is 3.25" and the shiny cylinder that moves in and out is 2" in diameter.
The tractor I have it hooked to is a 33hp diesel, with a flow rate of 7.6 gallons per minute @ 2100psi.
I experimented a bit this afternoon, and here are the results;
First, it is 10 degrees outside, took awhile to get the tractor started, but now inside the shed.
I'm splitting 16" long Cherry, about 10" in diameter.
If I start the ram a couple inches from the log, push until it splits, then return the ram to the same position, it takes 10 seconds.
The log splits sufficiently about half way in, so total travel is about 12 inches in, 12 inches back.
I tried running the ram at idle, half speed, and full throttle, the ram speed stays constant.
Should it? Could it be because the fluid is thick from the cold?
Will the speed be better or worse in warmer weather?
The ram moves forward at one speed, but when retracted, it moves faster?
Why...
I tried switching the hoses and the control lever on the tractor, but that only changes the direction the splitter lever must be pushed/pulled to operate the ram.
I've read quite a lot about three point splitters being very slow because of the flow rate on the tractor, and understand that, but if I can make this one work slightly faster, I'll be set.
I'm hoping to put a 4 way head on it, which will improve speed enough to not buy a $1500 splitter.
Again, most of my rounds are in the 8"-12" range, a 4 way split would be a 1 way trip through the splitter!
At 1 split per 15 seconds = 1440 splits per day equaling 1.5 pieces of wood = 2160 pieces (accounting for 15 minutes rest every hour) and a cord being a (very) rough 600 pieces, we should be able to split 3.6 cords. "If" a 4 way head would work, I could up that number...
Am I off a bit? (don't laugh too hard...I'm new...)
I don't need a splitter that can split 4 cords an hour, just fast enough that I or one of my guys can be as efficient as possible (not have to wait on the ram).
We need to be able to split at least 4 cords a day (1 man)
I only have $200.00 in this thing...so I can easily sell it to someone not needing great speed to recover my money.
Rob
Please help me understand a few things, and answer a few questions.
When talking about cycle time, is it from the fully retracted position, to fully extended, to fully retracted, or, is it from a couple inches before the log, until the log splits, and then back?
I got ahold of an old 3 point log splitter.
It has a cylinder that is about 30" long.
The cylinder outside diameter is 3.25" and the shiny cylinder that moves in and out is 2" in diameter.
The tractor I have it hooked to is a 33hp diesel, with a flow rate of 7.6 gallons per minute @ 2100psi.
I experimented a bit this afternoon, and here are the results;
First, it is 10 degrees outside, took awhile to get the tractor started, but now inside the shed.
I'm splitting 16" long Cherry, about 10" in diameter.
If I start the ram a couple inches from the log, push until it splits, then return the ram to the same position, it takes 10 seconds.
The log splits sufficiently about half way in, so total travel is about 12 inches in, 12 inches back.
I tried running the ram at idle, half speed, and full throttle, the ram speed stays constant.
Should it? Could it be because the fluid is thick from the cold?
Will the speed be better or worse in warmer weather?
The ram moves forward at one speed, but when retracted, it moves faster?
Why...
I tried switching the hoses and the control lever on the tractor, but that only changes the direction the splitter lever must be pushed/pulled to operate the ram.
I've read quite a lot about three point splitters being very slow because of the flow rate on the tractor, and understand that, but if I can make this one work slightly faster, I'll be set.
I'm hoping to put a 4 way head on it, which will improve speed enough to not buy a $1500 splitter.
Again, most of my rounds are in the 8"-12" range, a 4 way split would be a 1 way trip through the splitter!
At 1 split per 15 seconds = 1440 splits per day equaling 1.5 pieces of wood = 2160 pieces (accounting for 15 minutes rest every hour) and a cord being a (very) rough 600 pieces, we should be able to split 3.6 cords. "If" a 4 way head would work, I could up that number...
Am I off a bit? (don't laugh too hard...I'm new...)
I don't need a splitter that can split 4 cords an hour, just fast enough that I or one of my guys can be as efficient as possible (not have to wait on the ram).
We need to be able to split at least 4 cords a day (1 man)
I only have $200.00 in this thing...so I can easily sell it to someone not needing great speed to recover my money.
Rob