Wow that fact that it functions so well on the first try....awesome.
I was surprised too. I wasn't sure what was going to happen the first time out.
You may want to fab the oil and fuel tanks in the nose for weight.
Actually, I looked at the model again, and the CG is just about dead center. The problem is my fat *** sitting pretty much over the drive sprockets. When my son rides it and the plow is on, it will be better.
Like many others in this thread, I too have been following this build from the beginning. many years of joy should come from that toy as well as many years of practical use.
Congratulations on a job well done. I hope to be able to tackle projects like that one day once Im out of college. Right now I barely have time to do the chores
Thank you. I remember building a jet engine out of a turbocharger in college. It was built out of junk but it ran (barely) and it was a lot of fun. Unfortunately, you'll never have time even after you get out of school but you'll have money to do crazy projects and buy more tools.
I'm also curious, have you done any calculations as to how FAST this thing is going to move? I mean, a stock ZTR goes like around 15 MPH I realize though it is a smaller motor and the drive wheels will be smaller... But still that thing will probably haul...
I have thanks to parker spec sheets. Gotta love the internet. I underdrive the pump pulleys a little bit and the drive sprockets are a little smaller in diameter than a typical ZTR tire. Doing the math, it worked out to about 6.5 mph at full engine throttle. I was shooting for powerwheel speeds in idle and full speed (2.5 and 5 mph respectively).
So it's still a little too fast (you'll see in another youtube video I posted). So I'm either going to change the engine pulley or limit the pump control handles when my son rides it. I'm still deciding.
Of course.
Say goodbye to your lawn when you install the blade !
Say goodbye when he learns to push one handle and pull the other.
So a little update. I haven't given up on it but I have taken a break from building. Spent some time showing it off to family and riding it around a bit because it's so much fun.
Here is another video.
Now I've been working on the blade design. There were a fair amount of pieces that I didn't model in CAD and I just kind of built it as I went (hose routing, control handles etc). It worked out but I wasn't exactly happy with a few things even though I'm going to live with it. I'm running out of room fast, so I'm going to model every last piece before I resume building. I found parker fitting stp files online and I learned and easy way to draw hoses so it hasn't been too bad. Been a good learning experience actually.
As for the blade, I've decided to do hydraulic up and down with a da valve and hydraulic swivel with a electro-hydraulic valve (because of space). It will be a 42" wide blade (the dozer is 35" wide), will raise 9.5" off the ground and swivel a total of 50 degrees. I'll make some type of skid and/or plastic edge when plowing snow. It will not be spring loaded. I know that when the blade is raised it won't be flat but I just don't have the room or need for a 6 way blade. In all honesty this won't do much more work than just plowing snow. I have a small yard. I don't really know what I'm doing so it's the best I could think of considering the type of work it will actually be doing.
Here are a few pictures of where I'm at in the model.
I gotta say, it's been tough making everything fit. But it's a lot easier to change in the model than it is in real life. If I spend the time in the model now, the actual build should go real easy.
Thanks for looking.