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I am quite interested in the tech they use for the rams .. personally IMV this looks like a lot of trouble .. I mean how often do you get failures with a washing machine ? .. I'm not convincedPlease don't PM me for plant advice.. thanks .. Post in the forum where I will gladly help, as will many of our contributors.. as the info and responses will help everyone else, which is why we exist
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I believe there's great potential. It would be good to work in an exhaust fume free environment. It certainly is not good for health to inhale tons on particulate emissions from old excavator engines. Some of us do that for thousands of hour in a year. Equally, would prefer listening to music and birds singing rather than the raw diesel noise.
efficiency is another very important factor in case you want to earn some money...:)
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Looks very interesting. I do a fair few jobs indoors or very confined areas. All electric would be a great improvement for me. If it can genuinely work 8 hard hours per charge and costs less than the equivalent diesel what is not to like?
Didn't understand "The hydraulic architecture has also been replaced with electric architecture which incorporates electromechanical linear actuators that help to optimize the transmission chain". Are they saying the rams are not hydraulic, but wound in and out by electric motors?
Graham
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Originally posted by Grahams View PostDidn't understand "The hydraulic architecture has also been replaced with electric architecture which incorporates electromechanical linear actuators that help to optimize the transmission chain". Are they saying the rams are not hydraulic, but wound in and out by electric motors?
GrahamPlease don't PM me for plant advice.. thanks .. Post in the forum where I will gladly help, as will many of our contributors.. as the info and responses will help everyone else, which is why we exist
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Originally posted by Muz View PostYes and thats the bit I'm interested in, because when you think about how many times a ram get stroked on a normal day, theres going to have to be something very clever and reliable in there to make this thing viable, and they claim it has the same power ? ... Id have thought keeping the rams hydraulic would have been the way forward as its so reliable.
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Originally posted by Grahams View PostI suppose as it is a concept machine they are trying everything different, but in reality hydraulics work very well, why mess about with them?
That explains why the battery is well enough for the workday.
I have been following development of electric drive trains and most likely the same development happens in work machines that we have seen in electric cars. I believe that all big manufacturers are testing electric concepts and we will see some commercial products within 5 years.
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Originally posted by Mattir View Posteven though hydraulics work well, it still looses a lot of energy due to pump that runs all the day. Th electric rams use energy only when actually doing something useful.
That explains why the battery is well enough for the workday.
I have been following development of electric drive trains and most likely the same development happens in work machines that we have seen in electric cars. I believe that all big manufacturers are testing electric concepts and we will see some commercial products within 5 years.Please don't PM me for plant advice.. thanks .. Post in the forum where I will gladly help, as will many of our contributors.. as the info and responses will help everyone else, which is why we exist
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Originally posted by Muz View PostYes that was my thought .. a pump running constantly will use a hell of a lot of power, With todays stop/start tech in cars though, I thought they could have reduced that to a useable level ?. I just cant imagine a bunch of electric rams being anywhere as responsive as a good hydraulics system. I mean a straight up and down cylider can only be a worm or ratchet and pinion type drive ? any other guesses ? .. maybe its a small pump on every ram keeping it hydraulic ?
if they were electro mechanical, screw type actuators, they'd have to be much longer, unless they're multi stage acme thread type screws, enclosed in those outers .... can't see anything other than hydraulic fitting the dimensions, otherwise ..... or being fast enough .... I'd be concerned about cable life on the crowd ram actuator's supply, where it passes through the dipper's articulation point. They're some cables thoseIf it's got tracks, wheels, t*ts, or an engine, at some point it's gonna give you trouble!!
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Originally posted by v8druid View Postcould well be, looking at the pix Muz
if they were electro mechanical, screw type actuators, they'd have to be much longer, unless they're multi stage acme thread type screws, enclosed in those outers .... can't see anything other than hydraulic fitting the dimensions, otherwise ..... or being fast enough .... I'd be concerned about cable life on the crowd ram actuator's supply, where it passes through the dipper's articulation point. They're some cables those
like these?
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Originally posted by v8druid View PostSpot on find there BoyoPlease don't PM me for plant advice.. thanks .. Post in the forum where I will gladly help, as will many of our contributors.. as the info and responses will help everyone else, which is why we exist
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