spicergear
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- Millerstown, PA
Last summer I traded a buddy two hydraulic cylinders and rescued a beauty from him that he was going to make into a log splitter. Mounts were made up under bed and on the frame then the rear of frame hinged. The bulk of it was done.
On my Palfinger crane, it originally had a hydraulic motor on it to move it which had contemplated putting a spool on it for a cable like a crane. This knuckleboom & grapple proved it didn't need a cable so I had a spare valve to use. The big cylinder has a load holding valve so being a motor spool type running the cylinder won't matter because it takes a LOT of pressure to push the ram the opposite direction past that load valve so the system doesn't rely on the other valve(s) to hold the pressure.
The bed is a 12' deuce dropside with just under 4' overhang. Basically, the rear two thirds of the bed will balance out so the ram should only have to heave up the weight of the front one third of the bed and the load on that front third. The big cylinder is a little longer than needed, but I don't mind it dumping to 75-ish degrees. Should be able to dump wet clay and the price was right.
The ram is mounted as low as it can be at the rear of it in the chassis and as high as it can be in the bed so it is already on an upward angle before it has extended any. I just got it plumbed last night and it works fine and move the heavy bed without a hint of labor. Can't wait to put about eight ton of gravel on it (and my driveway).
On my Palfinger crane, it originally had a hydraulic motor on it to move it which had contemplated putting a spool on it for a cable like a crane. This knuckleboom & grapple proved it didn't need a cable so I had a spare valve to use. The big cylinder has a load holding valve so being a motor spool type running the cylinder won't matter because it takes a LOT of pressure to push the ram the opposite direction past that load valve so the system doesn't rely on the other valve(s) to hold the pressure.
The bed is a 12' deuce dropside with just under 4' overhang. Basically, the rear two thirds of the bed will balance out so the ram should only have to heave up the weight of the front one third of the bed and the load on that front third. The big cylinder is a little longer than needed, but I don't mind it dumping to 75-ish degrees. Should be able to dump wet clay and the price was right.
The ram is mounted as low as it can be at the rear of it in the chassis and as high as it can be in the bed so it is already on an upward angle before it has extended any. I just got it plumbed last night and it works fine and move the heavy bed without a hint of labor. Can't wait to put about eight ton of gravel on it (and my driveway).
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