That is the big downside to these glorified lawn mowers.
@Soopitup, trade current toy tractor for a B, L, or any of the real tractors, plz.
That is the big downside to these glorified lawn mowers.
Go big or go home
Can you clarify your statement above?I've noticed that my loader has less lifting power at the end of the day.
When the tractor is cold (not ran) and I start it running at idle I have no problem lifting the front loader ( 2023 BX23S).
It's very slow, but it has no problem lifting and curling the bucket.
Once I've ran it for a while at idle it doesn't want to lift the bucket at all.
Yeah, I was paging through the WSM last night and I noticed how small the pump was.there's nothing wrong with it. Normal for that tractor. That tractor's hydraulic pump is TINY in regards to flow. The pump has a pair of gears inside of it which mesh together and are "sealed" at the ends between the gears and housing. When the fluid warms up to operating temp (which, btw is roughly 100 deg above ambient temp), the pump parts expand and the amount of leakage between the gears and also between the gears & the housing increases. Because the pump is so tiny, any leakage is felt by a loss of hydraulic power.
HA!
The loader should raise an empty bucket at idle speed.Let me clarify here; I'm not trying to do any work with the tractor at idle.
I also don't have a problem with the tractor capacity.
When I want to use the tractor I go out to the garage, start the tractor and let it idle for a few seconds to a minute, depending on temp.
Because the bucket is on the ground I have to raise it to move the tractor. I leave it in idle and raise the bucket a few inches and idle out of the garage. The tractor has no trouble raising the bucket at this point (idle, cold fluid).
Then I rev it up and do whatever work needs to be done. RPMs Depend on what I'm doing, but I don't run it below 2500 RPMS.
When I'm done I let it idle for a few minutes, then back it into the garage.
While doing this (idle, hot fluid) I noticed if I had worked the tractor hard it could barely lift the bucket, sometimes not at all.
The hydraulics I'm used to is large heavy equipment. It doesn't have this problem.
I wasn't sure if this was normal for a small machine or not (I don't have any experience with small stuff).
If there is a problem I want to know now so I can get it in to service.
After hearing everyones advice I'm guessing there isn't a problem, but I'm going to confirm, just in case.
Won't be hard to do.
Yeah, I was paging through the WSM last night and I noticed how small the pump was.
Everything on here is a toy. Even that machine that Dan posted.
The shit I used to operate/work on would pull that around like an empty trailer.
Use the right tool for the job. I'd be stupid to grab my sledgehammer to nail boards together.
Those are all too big for what I need. Even the B.
I almost bought a B, and at first I was afraid I was going to regret getting the BX.
After seeing how the BX fits in my yard (and in my garage), and what it does to my yard, I'm glad I didn't get the B.
HA!
That's medium at best.
idle ..... what RPM is your idle ?
My 5 year old BX23S can idle at 1200,1600,1300,1400 even 1000. Don't know why it can vary and one day may actually try to read the WSM but I KNOW that under 2000 RPM the hydraulics are 'weak', same as the drivetrain. I assume that's the nature of the beast. As I've mentioned before , every pump has a minimum RPM and graphs to show GPM vs RPM.From what's been posted here , idling a diesel is not a good thing.
I start the beast up, get 2000 RPM THEN drive out of the garage and off to the jobsite, 2500 for a few minutes ,then 3500 going down the road. Unlike others though , when I'm not using the tractor I shut it off as diesel is almost $2 a litre and no good reason to waste fuel.
That's what a pressure gauge will tell you.Idle is 1500 RPMs.
I know the hydraulics are weak at idle.
That's not the question.
The question is the difference in hydraulic power at idle between cold/warm and hot.
YesThat's what a pressure gauge will tell you.
Dan
The BX is the best glorified lawn mower I ever had the pleasure of running!there's nothing wrong with it. Normal for that tractor. That tractor's hydraulic pump is TINY in regards to flow. The pump has a pair of gears inside of it which mesh together and are "sealed" at the ends between the gears and housing. When the fluid warms up to operating temp (which, btw is roughly 100 deg above ambient temp), the pump parts expand and the amount of leakage between the gears and also between the gears & the housing increases. Because the pump is so tiny, any leakage is felt by a loss of hydraulic power.
Secondly, since the pump is so teeny tiny, and the flow rate is so little, at idle they're very, very weak. You have to increase the engine speed in order to make the pump develop any pressure and flow. That is the big downside to these glorified lawn mowers. They're not really "tractors" per say, although they have all the features that a larger tractor does, just scaled way down.
Brand new ones that I dealt with on dealer lots were all like this. All the BX's were/are the same way.
Running at idle speed also tends to reduce coolant flow through the radiator and reduces airflow across the radiator, both can lead to overheating. Increase the engine speed. It's not gonna hurt anything but your ears, use ear plugs if it bothers you.
Ah I knew someone was going to tell me the BX pump is somehow different. It is not.Your pressure readings are right in line with that tractor. On the BX's, the pump is so small that it simply cannot flow enough oil to build enough pressure to to into relief at low idle speed. I wish all the BX's had this same style pump, but they can't. The BX's don't hold much oil in them, and there's no cooler to speak of other than that funny little fan on the driveshaft. Thus, if we are running against relief all the time, the oil heats up faster than it can be cooled, so the pumps on the bx's are sized accordingly, to keep them out of relief at or near idle speed. This helps keep the oil cool. Remember this is an open-center system, it doesn't have any type of flow control or flow divider. This design also keeps the build cost down, it's pretty simple for the most part. Cost is a concern on homeowner style tractors.
This is where the L series is what some call a "real tractor". BX's and B's have small pumps and don't flow much, particularly at idle speed.
Flow is affected by the displacement of the pump (gpm) which is directly related to shaft speed. If the shaft speed is low, pump output is going to be low. Depending on the amount of restriction in the system that the pump feeds, there may or may not be much pressure-again depends on the restriction. Restrictions are the valves, hoses, fittings, cylinders, motors, etc. Pressure is the sum of restrictions. If the restrictions flow more than the pump puts out, say a hydraulic motor can flow 1.5gpm, and the pump can only supply 1gpm, assuming no leakage at the motor or the pump, the motor will rotate but pressure will be low, resulting in low motor torque. But as RPM of the pump shaft increases (which is proportional to engine rpm), the pump puts out more fluid, yet the restrictions stay the same, so pressure rises, motor torque increases and since flow also increases with rpm the motor speed increases as well. Same principle with a cylinder. More flow=faster cylinder, more pressure=more cylinder force.
At idle the pump doesn't make much flow, and the restrictions from the cylinders aren't enough to make much pressure. Increase the engine RPM, flow goes up, restrictions stay the same so pressure rises to close to and maybe into relief pressure and thus the cylinder's force rise-giving you more hydraulic power. As engine speed increases, driveshaft and cooling fan speeds increase as well, resulting in more air flowing across the fins of the transmission, thus aiding on cooling. But since BX's have tiny pumps, at idle they just don't make much flow therefore not much pressure. Increasing the RPM increases flow AND pressure, up until it exceeds the relief valve's set pressure.
Quite agree. Lawn mowers aren't accustomed to that type stress.Be nice to the tractor and dont let it run deadheaded like that any longer than it takes to get a pressure reading.
Quite agree. Lawn mowers aren't accustomed to that type stress.