Hi Gents
I agree with Ted, turning the hydraulic power on and off via the unloading relief valve isn’t elegant, maybe a little utilitarian … but certainly not elegant. Thanks for your further explanation; I think you’re nearly at a full solution.
As far as I see it these are your wishes and constraints:
1)You want a reduced rate of rise or fall of pressure when the HPU is started or stopped (even when the hoses haven’t been connected to the trailer).
2)You want a reduced rate of rise or fall of pressure when the pump is loaded or unloaded (with the electric motor still turning) – this happens when the wider control system signals that the discharge must resume or pause.
3)When the motor is turning, the hoses are connected and the pump is unloaded (because the wider control system signals the discharge must pause) then the pressure must drop low enough to stop the action of the walking floor mechanism no matter how little is left in the trailer.
4)The HPU must not be running when the driver is connecting and disconnecting the hoses (it’s a bit rough on the electric motor all this starting and stopping but is it for safety reasons?).
5)When the HPU isn’t running, the pressure in the hoses to the trailer must drop low enough for the couplings to be connected or disconnected easily and without excessive spillage of oil.
And these, I believe, are the problems:
A)There are several ways of reducing the rate of rise of pressure when you want to load up the pump – either because the motor run-up time is complete or because the wider control system signals that discharge can resume. There are also several ways of reducing the rate of fall of pressure when you want to unload the pump to pause the discharge. But, if you also want to reduce the rate of decay of pressure when you stop the whole HPU then you will need to make some significant changes to the way the electric motor is controlled.
B)If you use a proportional relief valve or a soft switching pilot valve to control the rate of pressure change then the action of that new valve has to be co-ordinated with the existing 110V AC solenoid operated loading valve.
C)If you decide to dispense with the action of the existing solenoid operated loading valve then you need to find a way of taking it out of circuit. (You don’t have to solve both B and C; it’s one or the other for these two problems.)
D)A proportional relief valve, when given no input signal, might not be able to set the pressure low enough to pause the discharge when the trailer hasn’t got much left in it (typical minimum setting = 20 bar)
Sorry mate, I know all you asked was could you put a proportional valve into your system and look how many words have been typed in order to say “yes”.
If the gist of the matter, as summarised above, is about right then, for what it’s worth, here’s my opinion.
On problem A: the UK Health and Safety Executive or OHSA or whoever it is that causes your heart to sink when they turn up unannounced (and that’s the beauty of this forum – where exactly in the world are you?) anyway, ‘they’ might take a dim view of using the action of “resetting” an emergency stop button to actually “start” the HPU. It would be better if the driver pressed a green button to signal that it was time to start the HPU. Imagine the driver facing you in court because something went wrong and he says “It is reasonable for me to expect the HPU to remain off until I press some sort of ‘start’ button!”.
The powers that be might also take a poor view on the use of an “emergency stop” button to perform the “normal stop” that is part of your normal operating procedure. The guts of the problem are that when you want to have a controlled rate of fall of pressure because you want to stop the HPU, then you do actually have to let the electric motor run a little bit longer after you’ve pressed the stop button. This is so that the relief valve can gradually reduce its setting and get to the low pressure condition while the pump is still delivering and the motor still turning. Then once the pressure has got really low you can turn off the electric motor and let it, and the pump, coast to a stop. If you turn off the electric motor before the relief valve is at a low setting then the motor and the pump will stop dead and that doesn’t do them any good at all.
You need some sort of delay-off timer in the motor start circuit so the motor is turned on as soon as you press the green button but only stops a few moments AFTER you’ve pressed the red button. But, and this is the killer, you just can’t tolerate any delay in turning off the motor if it’s a real emergency. In a nutshell, I think you need:
- A recessed green button for starting the HPU. (Start the motor, let it run up to speed then ramp up the pressure.)
- A flush red button for the “normal stop” of the HPU. (Ramp down the pressure and only then stop the motor.)
- A big, fat, bright red, pull-to-reset or twist-to-release, mushroom headed, can’t-miss-it, can’t confuse it with anything else, “emergency stop” button which will turn off the power to the electric motor and also instantly unload the pump. And no one cares if the pump didn’t like it because it was an emergency.
On problem B: if you go for the soft switching solenoid valve then to load the pump you need to energise both new and old solenoids together. To unload the pump you need to de-energise the new solenoid first but delay the de-energisation of the old solenoid until the new soft switching valve has completed the soft unloading of the pump. You might be able to tie the old solenoid in with the motor contactor (so it comes on and off with the running of the motor) and operate the new solenoid via the original control circuit (so it comes on 10 seconds after starting the motor, goes on and off when the wider control system dictates and also goes off as soon as you press the “normal stop” button – remember the motor needs to run on a little when there is a “normal stop”). When you do an emergency stop the pump will unload immediately because of the de-energisation of the old solenoid.
With the proportional valve solution you will see a small jump in pressure from ~3 to ~20 bar when the original solenoid is energised and then the pressure will gradually rise to the full value as the proportional valve is ramped up. If you tie in the original solenoid with the motor contactor then you will be starting the pump against a 20 bar (or so) load. This will probably be OK because your electric motor is very generously sized. When you do the “normal stop” you would ramp down to about 20 bar and then unload the pump completely just as you turn off the motor. When you do an emergency stop the pump will unload immediately because of the de-energisation of the old solenoid.
On problem C: if you just wanted to get rid of the original solenoid valve (or its action) you could:
- Wire it up so it is permanently energised [except the HPU will go wrong when the red-hot-for-years-but-essentially-useless solenoid eventually stops working]
- Screw something mechanical into the valve’s manual override feature and force it into a “switched” position. Then don’t bother energising it [it’s not pretty but it works]
- Change it for a normally closed solenoid valve (the other option available on the 7VR150 relief valve) but never wire it up [seems a waste]
- Change it for an A879 blank cavity plug [if you can get one from Integrated Hydraulics – I think their range has been consolidated into a “best-off” selection now that they’ve been taken over by Eaton]
- Change it for a 2CN20 needle valve (fits in the same A879 cavity) and wind the needle valve fully closed [but this leaves an adjuster showing for someone to fiddle with]
- Change it for a 3CA20 check valve (fits in the same A879 cavity)
- Change the whole valve body or fit a new relief valve that doesn't have this solenoid loading valve feature, or better still fit a new relief valve in a body that can also accommodate the new soft start valve or proportional relief valve.
With no original solenoid valve to do the rapid de-pressurisation in an emergency you could chop the 24V DC supply to the proportional solenoid valve (so the ramp down function is curtailed) – but, as I said before, some amplifiers don’t like that too much and it shortens their service life. If you only had the soft start valve available to do the unloading then you can’t change its opening rate and you would have to rely on the motor coming to a dead stop (but with the soft start option we are only talking about 300 milliseconds delay).
And finally, problem D: just how low does the pressure have to be before the hydraulic supply can no longer move any part of the walking floor of an empty trailer? Maybe you could experiment; there's a chance that this might not be a problem at all. But if it is then don’t get rid of the old loading solenoid valve and don’t tie it in to the motor circuit but sequence its operation with the proportional valve (ramp down as far as you can and then drop the last bit of pressure by de-energising the old solenoid).
There are ways of fitting a sequence valve to isolate the trailer connection hose from the supply until the pump pressure reaches some critical value. But then you would also have to incorporate some sort of venting circuit for the hoses and it all gets a bit ugly.
And that’s me completely exhausted on the subject (sorry for the length of this post AGAIN. I just get carried away - reminder to self: get a life!)
Good luck - let me know how you get on.
DOL