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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt

I got a Hydraulic Pump today. Piston type. 3 pistons. Belt driven by
1.5HP Lesson Electric Motor.

Manufacturer seems to be Arimitsu Ltd for Britt Tech Corporation.
Model 15. But no plausable information on either eBay or Google.

Anybody have any further information?

Thanks in advance.
Bob AZ
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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt

"wstiefer" recommended in news:HIwGj.5183$qT6.2325
@nlpi070.nbdc.sbc.com:

http://www.arimitsu.co.jp/en/e_product/product01.htm


Yeppers, looks to be a pressure washer pump, not a hydraulic pump.

LLoyd
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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt



Bob AZ wrote:
I got a Hydraulic Pump today. Piston type. 3 pistons. Belt driven by
1.5HP Lesson Electric Motor.

Manufacturer seems to be Arimitsu Ltd for Britt Tech Corporation.
Model 15. But no plausable information on either eBay or Google.

Anybody have any further information?

Thanks in advance.
Bob AZ


All The Web
http://www.arimitsu.co.jp/en/e_product/product01.htm


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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt

On Wed, 26 Mar 2008, "Lloyd E. Sponenburgh" wrote:
"wstiefer" wrote:


http://www.arimitsu.co.jp/en/e_product/product01.htm


Yeppers, looks to be a pressure washer pump, not a hydraulic pump.


Quite useful item, just not for what you were originally planning.
Get a high-pressure hose and wand, and you can make some high-pressure
water and turn tough cleaning jobs into easy blasting jobs.

It's a little big to be called "portable", but you can put casters
on it or bolt it to a standard pallet, so it is easily movable.

Use the suction fitting (little vinyl hose) to add soap to the
output. Some pumps have a minimum flow rating for internal cooling,
if it doesn't have a relief valve you may need to add one.

Be sure to check the spec sheets for the temp limits before trying
this, but some pumps can take hot water input from a water heater, and
when the pump adds some more energy the output is darned near steam.

-- Bruce --

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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt

� Be sure to check the spec sheets for the temp limits before trying
this, but some pumps can take hot water input from a water heater, and
when the pump adds some more energy the output is darned near steam.

� � � -- Bruce --



Bruce

Thanks for the nice additional information. The reason I thought it
was a hydraulic/oil pump is because the whole thing is an oily mess.

Today I looked things over some more and have to agree it is not for
oil but as you indicate for high pressure washing among other things.
I have not found the pump on the arimitsu site and there does not seem
to be a britt site. The whole thing is mounted in/on a cart that looks
like a small wheelbarrow. A swivel wheel in front and two larger
wheels in the rear. Also has some sort of a pressure regulator and a
pressure switch in the motor control circuit. I took all the wiring
out and will clean everything up before putting it back together. Most
of the wiring has rotted wiring.

Tomorrow I hope to take it to a car wash where I can hose it down and
clean it up. I am almost afraid to touch it. I did remove the motor,
1� HP Lesson Motor. If it all works I will probably sell it on Ebay.
If I don't get enough money for it I will keep it for the motor. I can
use a bigger motor for my mill.

Take care
Bob AZ


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Default Hydraulic Pump Arimitsu Britt

On Thu, 27 Mar 2008 20:29:57 -0700 (PDT), Bob AZ
wrote:

? Be sure to check the spec sheets for the temp limits before trying
this, but some pumps can take hot water input from a water heater, and
when the pump adds some more energy the output is darned near steam.

? ? ? -- Bruce --



Bruce

Thanks for the nice additional information. The reason I thought it
was a hydraulic/oil pump is because the whole thing is an oily mess.

Today I looked things over some more and have to agree it is not for
oil but as you indicate for high pressure washing among other things.
I have not found the pump on the arimitsu site and there does not seem
to be a britt site. The whole thing is mounted in/on a cart that looks
like a small wheelbarrow. A swivel wheel in front and two larger
wheels in the rear. Also has some sort of a pressure regulator and a
pressure switch in the motor control circuit. I took all the wiring
out and will clean everything up before putting it back together. Most
of the wiring has rotted wiring.

Tomorrow I hope to take it to a car wash where I can hose it down and
clean it up. I am almost afraid to touch it. I did remove the motor,
1? HP Lesson Motor. If it all works I will probably sell it on Ebay.
If I don't get enough money for it I will keep it for the motor. I can
use a bigger motor for my mill.


Pressure switches on a "stationary" washer like that can be a
problem - I had a Car Wash that had a unit like that at the front of
the wash line to do tires, and it had a manual control - when they had
no cars, the workers would shut it off, IF they didn't see cars in
line at the vacuums that would be there in a few minutes.

The car wash owner didn't care about cars that would be there in 3
minutes, he wanted it to be on a timer or a pressure switch and shut
off every possible second it wasn't in use to "Save Electricity".
(Cheap *******s in that industry won't pay the help minimum wage, but
they want to shave a few pennies off the power bill...)

I refused to install a pressure switch unless it could be done right
- with a pressure switch with a large dead-band AND a high pressure
bladder accumulator to make up for leaky hoses - take fifteen minutes
or more for small leaks to bleed back down to the "Start" setting, AND
a dwell timer so the guns had to be closed (max pressure, on the
relief valve) for a certain length of time to trip shutdown, AND a
minimum run time timer so they still couldn't short-cycle the motor
once it tripped on. Belt, Suspenders and a rope.

Because if I didn't do it the right way they'd be torching and
buying new 5 HP motors monthly, and moaning at me about the costs.

Whenever you start a high-start-torque motor on a compressor or pump
it should run for 3 minutes bare minimum before shutdown, 10 minutes
is a lot better. Keeps them cool which makes them happy, and a happy
electric motor is a long life electric motor.

And you NEVER allow multiple short cycles in a row because of bad
controls design. You send locked-rotor current through the motor for
a second (then it ramps down) and that generates a big slug of heat
deep down inside the motor windings on every start - it takes a while
running for them to cool back down to normal.

Unless you put a continuous cooling fan on the motor (and with a
TEFC 'washdown duty' motor you can't because there's no internal
airflow when it is not running) constant short cycling will spot-burn
the windings and kill any motor fast.

-- Bruce --

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