| Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler | |
|
+9dangeroustoys56 matthew sidor 11hpcrafstman Jamus W1ldyOvvnZ arines 1988 Jordan CityRedneck Mobtech_Photo 13 posters |
Author | Message |
---|
Mobtech_Photo New Member
Join date : 2012-06-06 Points : 4558 Posts : 3
| Subject: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler June 23rd 2012, 8:50 pm | |
| I have been searching the internet about how to make my '05 GT5000 Hydro faster. I have seen that the reason why we can not put a smaller pulley on the trans is because of heat. If I were to put a tranny cooler on the hydro, can I keep it cool enough to work? I am not thinking super fast. Trying to get to 10 mph with a reliable trans. Let me know your thoughts. | |
|
| |
CityRedneck Member
Age : 28 Join date : 2011-08-13 Points : 5144 Posts : 241 Location : Winter Park
| |
| |
Mobtech_Photo New Member
Join date : 2012-06-06 Points : 4558 Posts : 3
| |
| |
CityRedneck Member
Age : 28 Join date : 2011-08-13 Points : 5144 Posts : 241 Location : Winter Park
| |
| |
Jordan Member
Age : 30 Join date : 2010-10-03 Points : 5355 Posts : 170 Location : Ontario Canada
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler June 23rd 2012, 10:08 pm | |
| i dont think it will, i see it like running an engine at a solid 12000 RPM heat doesnt make much difference its still going to kill it | |
|
| |
arines 1988 New Member
Join date : 2012-03-11 Points : 4658 Posts : 12
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 15th 2012, 8:10 pm | |
| well think about this auto tranys in car have trany coolers or they would blow up it would take some time and effort but i think it would work with the right size cooler and a fan to help when the temp goes up i am gonna try it if i can find a hydro | |
|
| |
Guest Guest
| Subject: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 16th 2012, 2:16 am | |
| Most rider hydros dont have external hoses that connect the pump and wheel motor, so there is no place to put in an inline cooler. The better residential/ commercial mowers have a cooler for the hydraulic fluid. If you are looking to get 130-150% of stock speed, I dont see the hydro blowing up. I have increased speed on hydros and not had a catastrophic failure. Just dont try to go stupid fast with one. The pump/motor have springs that will not operate properly at higher RPMs. kinda like floating the lifters on a car motor by over rev-ing. It will also have a pressure relief valve. If it build up too much pressure, it will bypass back to the pump inlet. This will add to the heat issue. If you do crank one up, make sure to put in fresh oil and you will need to change it more often. |
|
| |
W1ldyOvvnZ Member
Age : 28 Join date : 2011-12-06 Points : 5251 Posts : 499 Location : Winchester, ON, Canada
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 16th 2012, 8:01 pm | |
| have you thought of making a custom lift and cutting back the axles and running chains from one or both hydro axles to a live axle underneath it and doing getting your speed from the sprocket ratio instead of the pulleys? I can't see anything going wrong because the hydro is running at normal speeds, its just making sure the hydro has enough power for your live axle. this is a quick idea of what im talking about | |
|
| |
Jamus Established Member
Age : 45 Join date : 2010-06-28 Points : 5806 Posts : 511 Location : Southern WV
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 16th 2012, 8:23 pm | |
| That's the idea I had and noone seemed to think one way or the other when I mentioned it. I didn't make a drawing though. I can't think of a thing wrong with doing it that way. | |
|
| |
11hpcrafstman New Member
Age : 26 Join date : 2012-05-01 Points : 4601 Posts : 12
| |
| |
matthew sidor Member
Age : 30 Join date : 2012-04-13 Points : 4791 Posts : 184 Location : Montesano, Washington
| |
| |
W1ldyOvvnZ Member
Age : 28 Join date : 2011-12-06 Points : 5251 Posts : 499 Location : Winchester, ON, Canada
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 16th 2012, 10:22 pm | |
| - matthew sidor wrote:
Thats exactly what me and jamus mean! I really don't know how you find all these pictures, almost every idea someone has you'll find someone who's used it! I think that would be the only way you could get more speed out of a hydrostatic without overheating issues. | |
|
| |
matthew sidor Member
Age : 30 Join date : 2012-04-13 Points : 4791 Posts : 184 Location : Montesano, Washington
| |
| |
W1ldyOvvnZ Member
Age : 28 Join date : 2011-12-06 Points : 5251 Posts : 499 Location : Winchester, ON, Canada
| |
| |
dangeroustoys56 Veteran Member
Age : 54 Join date : 2010-02-10 Points : 7076 Posts : 1726 Location : Florida, USA
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler July 20th 2012, 7:16 pm | |
| Hydros wont take being sped up, my 99 hydro murray already has a 3" pulley on it - and its stock - with a 17HP twin on it, it boogies pretty darn good stock.
Best way to use a straight axle is get a 700R - the kind similar to a right angle gear box - lower input and side sprocket - less stuff to break. | |
|
| |
BatTractor2012 New Member
Age : 32 Join date : 2012-08-11 Points : 4487 Posts : 2 Location : Charleston SC,
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler August 11th 2012, 10:32 am | |
| Hey everybody i used to play around with mowers and now im gettin back into it and someone gave me a hydrostatic mower and i want to just change the pulley for a lil bit more speed and torque never done this to a hydrostatic before its gonna be a mud toy any input would be great | |
|
| |
dangeroustoys56 Veteran Member
Age : 54 Join date : 2010-02-10 Points : 7076 Posts : 1726 Location : Florida, USA
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler August 13th 2012, 6:29 pm | |
| Hydros dont like to be modified - youd be better off with a manual trans.
My 17HP twin hydro murray already has stock on it a 3" trans pulley - thats about as small as you can go . | |
|
| |
Junkstarbuilds Administrator
Age : 48 Join date : 2012-07-03 Points : 4843 Posts : 236 Location : Fort Stewart Georgia
| Subject: Hydro trans September 4th 2012, 11:33 am | |
| So, Obviously Hydros are useless for speed, But are they "ok" for an off road mower? I have two mowers with Hydro trans, no budget for the two, so I was thinking they would be "ok" for a trail-off road mower... I was thinking these might be best for my hunting mower...anyone think differently?
So the set up on both are MTD chassis, hydro trans, and both could have 17hp Kohlers ( or 12.5 briggs, 20hp optwin briggs) (yes i have all these engines) When I say "Hunting Mower" I use them for durabilty, reliability, and try to reduce noise as much as possible. I also add typical things like rear rack, headlights, and brush guards.
So, with those specs, limited budget, does anyone agree on a hydro being decent enough to keep for that purpose? | |
|
| |
dked41 Member
Age : 60 Join date : 2012-01-31 Points : 4808 Posts : 141 Location : central Wisconsin
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler September 4th 2012, 1:20 pm | |
| As long you realize the limitations, I don,t think you will have any problems making a transport vehicle out of it. It won't have a locked diff, so traction could be an issue, but otherwise I would say do it. | |
|
| |
goesman Member
Age : 45 Join date : 2012-01-18 Points : 4853 Posts : 119 Location : Salem, Mo.
| Subject: Re: Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler September 4th 2012, 2:45 pm | |
| I love my hydro for off road. I have the ability to make it really crawl along. Also when I drop it off some thing real steep I put it in reverse to help slow it down. | |
|
| |
Sponsored content
| |
| |
| Hydrostatic with Transaxle Cooler | |
|