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Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem
Blow back with a airline?
Blow back with a airline? I'd agree could be a small bit of shite blocking it
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. Is the oil pump internal or external on it? Not a big job to pull it out either way and see whats going on!
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. My tank was new in 2007.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. As said most likely a bit of shite but it could also be an oil pump failure, take off the back plate, 6 or 8 allen screws iirc, have some sort of tray to catch the oil, the pump will be obvious to you, you can undo it and if all appears to be free of shite spin it by hand with its pickup pipe in some oil, it should send oil out the delivery side, there is usually an adjustable cam mechanism that controls the output.
Cheer`s lad job for next week i`d say
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago
to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago. Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill,
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, What size tank, I'd be happy enough at 4 minutes for a 2600, aren't you getting paid by the hour..
Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump. i was of the opinion that a milking machine works at a very different speed to a slurry tanker pump so needs different oil. Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, have never changed veins yet. 3 1/2 mins to fill 2600gallons of watery pig and 4 mins maybe to fill average cow slurry.
Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem
Blow back with a airline?
Blow back with a airline? I'd agree could be a small bit of shite blocking it
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. Is the oil pump internal or external on it? Not a big job to pull it out either way and see whats going on!
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. My tank was new in 2007.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. As said most likely a bit of shite but it could also be an oil pump failure, take off the back plate, 6 or 8 allen screws iirc, have some sort of tray to catch the oil, the pump will be obvious to you, you can undo it and if all appears to be free of shite spin it by hand with its pickup pipe in some oil, it should send oil out the delivery side, there is usually an adjustable cam mechanism that controls the output.
Cheer`s lad job for next week i`d say
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago
to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago. Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill,
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, What size tank, I'd be happy enough at 4 minutes for a 2600, aren't you getting paid by the hour..
Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump. i was of the opinion that a milking machine works at a very different speed to a slurry tanker pump so needs different oil. Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, have never changed veins yet. 3 1/2 mins to fill 2600gallons of watery pig and 4 mins maybe to fill average cow slurry.
Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem
Blow back with a airline?
Blow back with a airline? I'd agree could be a small bit of shite blocking it
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. Is the oil pump internal or external on it? Not a big job to pull it out either way and see whats going on!
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. My tank was new in 2007.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. As said most likely a bit of shite but it could also be an oil pump failure, take off the back plate, 6 or 8 allen screws iirc, have some sort of tray to catch the oil, the pump will be obvious to you, you can undo it and if all appears to be free of shite spin it by hand with its pickup pipe in some oil, it should send oil out the delivery side, there is usually an adjustable cam mechanism that controls the output.
Cheer`s lad job for next week i`d say
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago
to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago. Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill,
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, What size tank, I'd be happy enough at 4 minutes for a 2600, aren't you getting paid by the hour..
Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump. i was of the opinion that a milking machine works at a very different speed to a slurry tanker pump so needs different oil. Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, have never changed veins yet. 3 1/2 mins to fill 2600gallons of watery pig and 4 mins maybe to fill average cow slurry.
Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem
Blow back with a airline?
Blow back with a airline? I'd agree could be a small bit of shite blocking it
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. Is the oil pump internal or external on it? Not a big job to pull it out either way and see whats going on!
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. My tank was new in 2007.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. As said most likely a bit of shite but it could also be an oil pump failure, take off the back plate, 6 or 8 allen screws iirc, have some sort of tray to catch the oil, the pump will be obvious to you, you can undo it and if all appears to be free of shite spin it by hand with its pickup pipe in some oil, it should send oil out the delivery side, there is usually an adjustable cam mechanism that controls the output.
Cheer`s lad job for next week i`d say
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago
to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago. Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill,
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, What size tank, I'd be happy enough at 4 minutes for a 2600, aren't you getting paid by the hour..
Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump. i was of the opinion that a milking machine works at a very different speed to a slurry tanker pump so needs different oil. Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, have never changed veins yet. 3 1/2 mins to fill 2600gallons of watery pig and 4 mins maybe to fill average cow slurry.
Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem
Blow back with a airline?
Blow back with a airline? I'd agree could be a small bit of shite blocking it
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. Is the oil pump internal or external on it? Not a big job to pull it out either way and see whats going on!
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. My tank was new in 2007.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see pic . What could be the problem. As said most likely a bit of shite but it could also be an oil pump failure, take off the back plate, 6 or 8 allen screws iirc, have some sort of tray to catch the oil, the pump will be obvious to you, you can undo it and if all appears to be free of shite spin it by hand with its pickup pipe in some oil, it should send oil out the delivery side, there is usually an adjustable cam mechanism that controls the output.
Cheer`s lad job for next week i`d say
When I bought my Abbey tanker new, the dealer specified milking machine oil or if I didn't have any to use some engine oil mixed with hydraulic oil to give it similar viscosity. He also said ideally to run a half pint of diesel through the pump intake after a day's work or as often as I could. He sold a huge number of tanks in his time and no doubt all buyers got his advice. I've only used milking machine oil at a drop every couple of seconds and so far so good. to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago
to me milking machine oil is a complete no no. sae 30 is all we'd use and touch wood pump is workin as good as the day it arrived 9 years ago. Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill,
Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, What size tank, I'd be happy enough at 4 minutes for a 2600, aren't you getting paid by the hour..
Milking machine pump oil is just a light oil designrd for a vacuum pump same as a tanker pump. i was of the opinion that a milking machine works at a very different speed to a slurry tanker pump so needs different oil. Milking machine oil here aswell, pint of desiel up the exaust every other day aswell, on a side note any find major tank slow to fill? Mine always was, changed the veins and gaskets over xmas and made little to no differance, probabky somewhere arounf 4 mins to fill, have never changed veins yet. 3 1/2 mins to fill 2600gallons of watery pig and 4 mins maybe to fill average cow slurry.
Ran a Jurop pump here on milking machine oil for 11 years spreading our own slurry and for 2 other farmers also. Never had to do a tap to the pump. It was a drip every 2 seconds.
SAE 30 is an engine oil. Its a single cylinder petrol engine oil I wouldn't exactly call that common like. If someone said use engine oil I'm sure sae 30 wouldn't be the first thing to come to mind.
does the drip rate not determine how fast it is consumed ?
10W/40 ENGINE OIL Jurop pump. And told by the dealer under no circumstances use milking machine oil ,hydraulic oil or any other type of oil only engine oil.
Look up your engine oils and the difference between them, there is no problem in using milking machine oil or any lite lubricating oil but you would want to be checking it a couple of times a day as the pump will burn it out much quicker, BUT DO NOT USE HYDRAULIC OIL. You said first not to use milking machine oil now you are saying that its OK to use it ? How do you mean look up your engine oils ?
no its not, slurryboy is correct. so what is a milking machine pump then?
A concentric positive displacement sliding vein pump that makes a vacuum. But it's not a vacuum pump.
pretty much the same as a slurry tank vac pump, only its switchable. whats switchable??? all vaccy pumps work in 1 direction
Our tanker does a serious amount of work and it used to get any oil we had lying about, it needed a new set of veins into the pump every season so when we got a new tanker 2 years ago we bought some sae 30 as thats what the book said, well one year later it still needed new veins
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s .
Using 15w 40 engine oil in the vacumn pump here with out any issue`s . Also can't adjust the oil dropper in the pump here so it's heavy enough on oil.
The oiler on the pump here ain't working .(abbey tank) Not sure how long it's stopped checked it the other day and was half full checked tonight and still half full . It's the non adjustable type see
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