Pete1961
Mechanical
- Apr 22, 2018
- 2
I am looking at adding braking to a little 700Kg kit tracked excavator. At present it is limited to slopes of 10 degrees up & down hill. If I use a georotor motor with negative brake (fail safe spring applied, braking removed by pressure via shuttle valve) & a dedicated motor spool directional valve or DCV, then what are the overrunning circuit considerations if any, I need to guard against? The design at present has the motor controlled by a cylinder / ram type DCV spool valve & no brake or additional valves whatsoever
The motor type DCV spool has both motor lines open to neutral (tank / atmospheric pressure) when at rest & also the return line is open to the tank when motor is running. A shuttle valve connects whichever motor line is selected, providing positive pressure to the brake remove / hold off pistons. 200 psi is needed in this selected line to start to lift the brake off, is totally off at 400 psi
Thus I cannot see how the two common bugbears of vacuum cavitation developing in the feed line, or overpressure spikes in the return line can ever occur. The brake will be on without the 200 psi positive pressure, so no rotation of the motor, i.e. it cannot become a pump. Also there is no chance of a pressure spike if an operator drops the control valve. I have some old 70's JCB tech handbooks, these show no additional valves beyond the shuttle & the motor type DCV
Am I missing anything here? I know if a motor it is fed by a cylinder (ram) spool then both above mentioned problems occur on overrunning, the anti vacuum & cross line relief valves then needed to protect the motor, in doing their job create a situation where the vehicle can then run away, hence a mechanically applied back up brake is also needed. This is called positive braking & can be seen on the Struck Corp tractor for instance. Negative braking is much more common on hydraulic track vehicle drives, hence the motors or additional brake add on parts for same. Thanks for any help in this.
The motor type DCV spool has both motor lines open to neutral (tank / atmospheric pressure) when at rest & also the return line is open to the tank when motor is running. A shuttle valve connects whichever motor line is selected, providing positive pressure to the brake remove / hold off pistons. 200 psi is needed in this selected line to start to lift the brake off, is totally off at 400 psi
Thus I cannot see how the two common bugbears of vacuum cavitation developing in the feed line, or overpressure spikes in the return line can ever occur. The brake will be on without the 200 psi positive pressure, so no rotation of the motor, i.e. it cannot become a pump. Also there is no chance of a pressure spike if an operator drops the control valve. I have some old 70's JCB tech handbooks, these show no additional valves beyond the shuttle & the motor type DCV
Am I missing anything here? I know if a motor it is fed by a cylinder (ram) spool then both above mentioned problems occur on overrunning, the anti vacuum & cross line relief valves then needed to protect the motor, in doing their job create a situation where the vehicle can then run away, hence a mechanically applied back up brake is also needed. This is called positive braking & can be seen on the Struck Corp tractor for instance. Negative braking is much more common on hydraulic track vehicle drives, hence the motors or additional brake add on parts for same. Thanks for any help in this.