a two-section, combination heat exchanger
The machine employed a two-section, combination heat exchanger for both
hydraulic oil and engine coolant (which was sized for the original, 
fixed-displacement pump) with a hydraulic fan drive. The fan drive was 
thermostatically controlled based on engine coolant temperature.
The drawback with this arrangement is, due to the engine being 
thermostatically controlled and the hydraulic system not, air flow 
through the combined heat exchanger depends entirely on engine 
temperature. This meant that the reduction in heat load from replacing 
the fixed pump with a variable-displacement unit resulted in a 
significant reduction in hydraulic oil temperature (normally a good 
thing!).
The engineers blocked off most of the hydraulic oil section of the 
cooler and ran the test again. This returned fuel consumption to the 
original level, but no significant improvement was seen.
It was concluded that the modification tested could result in a small 
cost saving with respect to a reduction in size of the oil cooler. But 
with fuel consumption being more important than any modest saving in 
cooling capacity, the idea of paying more for a pump that resulted in 
the oil being kept at a lower operating temperature – but increased fuel
consumption – was irreconcilable to the machine’s engineers.
Bellows Seal Valves
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