My point exactly.I suspect the BH has to be last in line to prevent back pressure damage. Kubota seems to like BH valves without 'T' lines.
See my comments about pressure drops. Pump.output will fall off as line pressure increases but not this much.I agree. That loss of flow makes no sense. This is a series system so 'flow in' equals 'flow out'. The only other place it has to go is to tank if there are tank connections, and then only if the valve is leaking.
This is really good point. My very limited understanding of a hydrostatic transmission is that it a positive displacement pump that is indeed connected to the implements in some form of open loop. Any sense of what a flow meter would test for?Sounds like there's more 'plastic' in the system somewhere. There shouldn't be any drop in GPM if it's an 'open center' system. Full 6.5 GPM should be available all the way to the furthest device, less friction losses( a wee amount).
Again, this is a really good point. Any idea why the dealer would want to test performance using a flow meter?See my comments about pressure drops. Pump.output will fall off as line pressure increases but not this much.
Dan
The flow rate is what determines the speed of the actuators (cylinders). You are losing 50% of the flow which is why the backhoe is slow.Again, this is a really good point. Any idea why the dealer would want to test performance using a flow meter?
Why is that?Side note you cannot use anything connected to any of the rear remotes when your backhoe is connected
I don't believe that either!Why is that?
Dan
What are you referring to as the document I have the owners, parts, assembly and parts manuals my page 17 doesn’t cover adding any items. thanksI have the same configuration but in a 3301 and it works flawlessly. There’s verbiage in the BH77 manual (p7 of the document/p17 of the pdf) that discusses how to prevent damage to the backhoe valve if these other options are also on the tractor.
What are you referring to as the document I have the owners, parts, assembly and parts manuals my page 17 doesn’t cover adding any items. thanks
Why is that?
Dan
That warning is 100% correct. BUT on the Lxx01 the OEM remotes are upstream of the backhoe valve.This is what is says in the manual from mine.
4. It is necessary to have the backhoe detached when
using rear remotes, the 3-point hitch or any other
valves that are downstream of the backhoe valve.
Failure to do this may cause the exceeding allowable
back pressure to break the seal or case of the backhoe
valve.
Gotcha That makes sense then.That warning is 100% correct. BUT on the Lxx01 the OEM remotes are upstream of the backhoe valve.
Dan
Excessive back pressure causing loss through a relief would be one possibility. Some inlet pressure tests would be informative.I'm a little confused about where the flow might be going. How can flow just disappear? Pressure, yeah, I get it. But flow? What goes in must come out.
Assuming no bleed off, you can very well see pressure changes across the circuit. Mass flow rate must be satisfied. Imagine a nozzle, the mass flow rate across the restriction is the same. Same concept with a leaf blower advertising 200mph wind out the tip vs another that is rated in cfm. Buy the one based on cfm, because you can "neck" down the tip to get the velocity. Now if there is a valve bleeding off fluid, then the equation changes. If the tech is seeing a loss of fluid "flow" or mass flow, then a valve before it is bleeding off. Chances are something is just not hooked up right, or the valve under the hydraulic filter has not been clocked right. Someone with a standard L series can probably speak better to its configuration. It is a flow director that directs flow to the pb, vs tank.I'm a little confused about where the flow might be going. How can flow just disappear? Pressure, yeah, I get it. But flow? What goes in must come out.
I have l3301 with BH77, third function, and 2 rear remotes. Backhoe easily overpowers the tractor. 2 functions are easy and quick. Can do 3, but it really slows down plus that’s not easy and takes lots of skill/practice. Now that I’m familiar with it, I’m doing WOT and can go pretty quick (becomes muscle memory).Hi All,
I recently purchased a brand new 3901 tractor with several hydraulic attachments — including a BH77 — and quickly noticed that the backhoe seemed sluggish and underpowered. The most obvious problem is that it won’t smoothly perform dual functions. For example, if I try to raise the boom first, the implement will then only very slowly curl the bucket. It's far inferior to the 2501 525/77BH or 26B TLB setup which I've rented a number of times.
The tractor is now back at the dealership (I called them about 30 minutes after they dropped it off, which was a bummer). They've run a handful of diagnostics on both tractor and backhoe, and they also seem surprised by the slow and uncoordinated performance. The best guess we’ve got comes from the Kubota factory itself: the machine is running too many implements on its hydraulic circuit.
Specifically, the tractor is equipped with (1) a front-loader, (2) a 3rd function valve, (3) a set of 3 rear aux hydraulics (for top & tilt), and (4) a BH77, connected in that order. Kubota’s guess is that the slow backhoe performance is due to the weak hydraulic flow by the time the fluid gets to the implement. A few numbers from tests done at the shop: At source, the pump is putting out 6.5 gal/min (as per factory spec). The flow rate drops to 5.7 gal/min after it crosses the front loader valve, then to 5.1 g/m after is crosses the 3rd function, and finally to 3.8 g/m by the time it crosses the rear auxiliaries and arrives at the backhoe.
Put simply: I'm asking a 3901 to do too much.
Still, I’m surprised that a 3901 can’t fully manage the load (or that that the company would sell it without a “3 implement max” warning.) Anyone experience something similar? If indeed it’s the hydraulics, then perhaps a diverter valve at the the rear aux directly to the BH77 would solve the problem? Or should I ask Kubota to switch to a model strong enough to power the implements I want? I get that a tractor isn’t rigged to function like a skidsteer or a mini ex, but a TLB configuration with a 3rd function and aux hydraulics seems like a reasonable setup.
Thoughts?
Thanks in advance to everyone on the forum for your time and opinions!