Yeah, "in retrospect" it seems pretty obvious. Only took me 3 clutches to figure it out.but it makes perfect sense in retrospect why it was doing what it did. I enjoy ‘internet diagnoses’ but this is a perfect example of things that would be obvious to me in person being missed while working ‘remote’
The position of the inlet relief has nothing to do with shock loads on the cylinders and moving it to as fter the loader valve leaves the valve unprotected.Putting the relief after the loader valve would fix that particular issue at the expense of a few more pieces and connections, but seems like the easiest thing to do here. The only weakness it presents is the loader dropping (even if little by little) when hitting bumps while loaded. Probably a rare occurrence, but.. something to consider.
I had to dig up your loader build thread since im newish here and never saw it, and i see you already updated that. I wasn't aware there was ever ANY factory loader subframe that didn't attach to the engine. I am only aware of the B219 and B1630 loaders for these tractors and all pics i can find of both, show the subframe attaching to the side of the engine. It would make sense to make those pieces removable for tractor splitting, but i would be surprised if there was a factory loader that simply didn't have them at all. Of course, that would arguably be acceptable if the engine actually bolted directly to the bellhousing rather than through a plate, so if i didn't already know what i learned from this thread, i wouldn't have given it much thought if id ever seen it before!
That would be a port relief and its commonly used to cushion shock loads and limit cylinder pressures in backhoe/excavator valves. He would need four of them. They are typically set considerably higher than inlet pressure because otherwise they WILL let your load drift.Yes, BUT if you put an inline relief between the loader valve and the base end of the lift cylinders, not only will it limit your lift force to that relief setting, it will also crack open any time the 'external forces' on your lift cylinders cause pressure to spike beyond the relief setting. Messicks did a video a while back with a grapple lid and got it over 6000psi even though the relief was probably 2000-3000psi, but the relief only protects the cylinders/hoses when the valve is open! This is the reason why crossover/cushion relief valves exist. If he put a relief there he would be unintentionally creating a 'cushion' valve of sorts. Which might be fine.. or might not.
Thanks for taking a look. Do you have any pics of what what axel bars look like or where I can find some?Your loader could use axle bars, they would go from the crossover under the tractor to the rear axle.
Otherwise that's not too bad of a setup, it does have some spread to the mount which help.
The rattle can be the throw out bearing or it could be the joint at the front of the transmission.
Check it when you have it split because you can't service it unless it's split.
The "axle bars" are not a bolt-on accessory. They are a feature of a well-designed subframe. Stiff steel bracing the tower support structure to the rear axle, bolting to the axle housing like so:Thanks for taking a look. Do you have any pics of what what axel bars look like or where I can find some?
I have the older style subframe ( for a factory plow that goes from engine to rear axle, I've also tied from the front mount of that subframe to the "front box frame" due to a couple of the engine bolts being stripped, my question is, is this full length subframe sufficient for a homemade loader? Even though it doesn't have the center support brackets shown in some of the pictures of the b219 loader frame found online, where torch originally had his frame tied in woth those three bolts os what mine is missing, it just goes front to back wth significant cross bracing between the railsThe great value of this as a learning experience for the rest of us is that people splitting these tractors for clutches or whatever else can now be aware of the POSSIBILITY of a bent 'motor plate' which could cause issues down the line. I know i said my loader subframe should make this failure nigh-impossible, but when i finally take it apart for a clutch im gonna check the plate out anyway!! Never would have thought to do that if not for this little contribution to the 'knowledge base'.