Yes you would be much happier with the 20.7 GPM than the 7.2!
Thank you. I just ordered the PTO pump
Which one?
My thoughts, take them as you wish!
IIRC my dedicated B21 TLB, and B26's produce about ~7GPM, I also believe other
small backhoes use around the same flow. What you are getting, I don't know?
If you buy a hoe that runs at approx 7GPM and you buy a 21GPM pump, you now have ~3 times the flow which basically means your cylinders will operate at 3 times the speed making it extremely hard to operate and control. All your hoses and valves are probably sized for lower flow, you may well build up additional pressure in the system when just sitting there doing nothing due to flow restrictions, because you are pumping 3 times the fluid than the system was designed for. This means additional heat and additional fuel.
If you get a pump with ~3 times the flow and slow the engine down to reduce the flow, instead of your engine running at ~1860 for 540 rpm for 21GPM, you now have it at idle at ~620 for 180 rpm for ~7GPM. You engine does not put out a lot of power at 620 rpm, if it does idle there at all, and the governor may be very erratic as load comes on and off.
If you want to run a backhoe ideally get a pump that is matched to the flow rating of the hoe. So if you get something needing 9~13 GPM, work out your power and engine speed requirements and required pump size to suit. Using a ~21 GPM pump you may still be limited at 1170 rpm >340 PTO> 13GPM or 810 rpm>235 PTO > 9 GPM due to reduced engine power output at lower rpm. YMMV.
EDIT: Specs used from
Tractordata info
Engine rpm = 2400
PTO rpm = 695
And happy to be corrected if my calcs are wrong!