Yes, I got a Prince pump and yes, I noticed there was no way to retain it to the shaft. I glanced at their instruction sheet and see they recommend a torque arm or something like that. If you could sometime, please post a picture of how you mounted yours.
Having just gotten my new B2601 yesterday, I am retiring the 8N from rotary cutter duty which means I can remount the grapple loader. (Sadly, no firewood-- small diameter pine has little value so this setup is purely for putting it through chipper.)
Three pictures to show what I did:
#1- 8N without anything attached, but you can see the hyd tank clearly.
#2- PTO pump attached, large inlet hose (only NPT on the setup), normal outlet with quick disconnect
#3- How it is mounted
Gravity feed from the tank to the pump via larger diameter hose worked very well for me. There is a full-port ball valve for shutting off the oil for disconnecting. (You want to think about how to remove your work of art as guessing your tractor wil not be dedicated to this one task.) The quick disconnect connects to an inlet on the valve bank (pictures next week).
In terms of mounting the PTO pump, it is a torque arm setup using the drawbar as the fixed point. The block of wood is both a spacer and has a little give to it. Not a great picture, but there is a chain that mounts to the the right lift arm limit chain. That prevents the PTO pump from walking off the shaft should it have that inclination. In the Prince kit, they use a single chain to both prevent the pump from spinning (my arm + wood block) and keep the pump on the shaft (my separate chain).
The pump works very well for my application. Will post a video at some point, but its really easy to pick up a pine, drop it onto the chipper chute, reposition back, grab it midway, push the tree into the chipper and then open the grapple before it gets pulled in by the chipper hydraulic feed. Dangerous as that sounds, you have me beat. I did combat robotics back in the day and the forces imparted by the spinners (self propelled stump grinders of one type or another) were frlghtening.
skeets>> See when you guys do stuff like this, to me at least it is like magic
Nah-- we just spent our time in different places. Everyone brings different skills and knowledge and lots of stuff looks like magic until you know how its done. ;-)