re: he was addressing the issue of check valves to protect the system from pressure overload that can arise from forces that might be encountered using a grapple
WHERE would this 'pressure overload' come from ?
I would like to try and provide some info to you regarding hydraulic system over pressures.
The 3 pt hitch is a good place to start as most owners do not know its circuit has both a relief and a safety valve.
The relief valve limits the pressure the pump can put into the lift cylinder and thus is limiting the weight the 3 pt can lift.
Once the 3 pt control is back in its neutral position with the weight held up by the 3 pt arms, the relief valve is no longer in the circuit limiting pressures in the 3 pt lift cylinder.
When the implement on the 3 pt arms is raised and stationary, if the owner adds more weight while the implement is raised, the hydraulic pressure in the 3 pt cylinder will continue to increase and the relief valve can do nothing to limit the increasing pressure.
If you are driving with a heavy implement in the raised position and going over bumps and dips, the inertia of the raised load greatly increases the pressures in the lift cylinders.
Modern tractors provide a Safety Valve for these situations. It remains in the cylinder hydraulic circuit at all times unlike the relief valve.
The safety valve will bleed off pressure avoiding over pressure of the lift cylinders and plumbing. The implement will drop a little each time the safety valve operates but damaging spikes are prevented. The adjustment/calibration of the safety valve cannot be done using the tractor pump because the pressure the safety valve opens at is far too high for the tractor pump. Often a fuel injector tester is used because it can generate pressures in the safety valve range.
The safety valve settings are between 3,300 and 3,600 psi.
The important point in all the above is that hydraulic pressures can be increased even with the tractor off or running with the control valve in its neutral position.
Adding a hydraulic thumb to a backhoe or excavator can also produce over pressure situations. The hydraulics curling the bucket or moving the thumb can be fighting each other and damage can occur because of pressure spikes.
Loader valves are less sophisticated than 3 pt hitch valves in that they only have a relief valve and not a safety valve. Curling a bucket forward and using it for bull dozing is shown in Owners' manuals as a practice to avoid. The leverage of the bucket and its linkages can magnify the pressures in the bucket cylinders to the point of damage.
There have been many owners of tractor who found forks to be a great addition to their loader. Unfortunately, too many of these owners find out the hard way that tipping the forks forward and using them to either push or pull generates excessive hydraulic pressures leading to hose rupture and bent cylinder push rods.
Grapples like forks can generate hydraulic pressures back into the system. A common way is lifting a heavy log Off Center so that one end of the log is having to be held up against the unbalanced gravity forces.
Dave