Generally speaking, a pressure compensated pump is a piston pump, usually with 9 pistons. The pistons are housed in a chamber very much like an old fashioned revolver where six bullets are stored in a rotating chamber. Each of the pump pistons has a “foot” that has a swivel joint. The foot is forced against a circular plate (called a swashplate) that does not rotate but is capable of changing its angle in relation to the pistons.
The barrel that holds the pistons is attached to the input shaft on the pump so that when the prime mover rotates, the barrel with pistons rotates as well. If the swashplate is perpendicular to the pistons, there is no movement of the pistons within their respective cylinder cavities in the barrel. The result is that there is no displacement. If the swashplate is angled to its maximum away from perpendicular, the pistons are forced in and out of their respective cavities within the barrel as each piston “foot” is forced to slide around the angular swashplate causing maximum displacement.
The swashplate is typically spring offset to the maximum angle (maximum displacement) position. There is a piston opposing the spring and if high-pressure fluid is allowed to enter the piston chamber, it causes the swashplate to move toward perpendicular or zero displacement.
In a pressure compensated pump, there is a small valve spool that normally vents the chamber behind the swashplate piston. There is an adjustable spring at one end of this spool that is used to establish the desired pressure. The other end of the spool is exposed to the system pressure. This is usually done internal to the pump so there is no external plumbing.
When system pressure rises to the level established by the adjustable spring, the spool moves and allows pressurized fluid to enter the swashplate piston chamber. The fluid pushes against the swashplate spring and reduces the angle of the plate toward minimum.
If the fluid passing across an orifice causes the pressure at the pump, the pump will de-stroke (move toward minimum angle) until the pressure drops to the setting of the adjustable spring on the spool. The spool now returns to its original position and stops flow to the swashplate piston. The spool will now continue to modulate the flow to the swashplate piston to maintain a swashplate angle that will produce the desired pressure in the circuit.
When we add load sensing, we add an additional valve spool that responds to a differential pressure as opposed to some maximum pressure. One end of the spool is exposed to the outlet pressure on the pump (just like the pressure compensated system). The other end of the spool is offset by a spring that sets the load sensing pressure. This spring may require anywhere from 6 to 15 bar and may or may not be adjustable. A pilot line to some remote location that is downstream from the control orifice connects the spring chamber of the load sensing spool. When the differential pressure through the plumbing and across the control orifice reaches the spring setting of the load sensing spool, the spool shifts and allows pressurized fluid to enter the swashplate piston chamber. The spool now modulates to maintain the differential pressure just as in the case of the pressure compensated system. If the resistance to flow increases to the level of the pressure compensator, that system overrides the signal from the load sensing spool and pushes the pump to minimum displacement.
I hope this is helpful.
Dan Helgerson CFPS, AFPI, AJPP