Drove a drum roller today at work and looked under the hood. It is powered by a horizontal 8 hp honda. From the engine there is a pulley (no clutch) that runs a belt that goes to a pulley on a transmission case. The output of the transmission has a sprocket that goes to the the drive axle indirectly via a jackshaft. On the bottom of this trans there is a shaft connected to the lever. When the shaft is rotated the power is transmitted variably to the output shaft, reverse is accomplished by using the lever to rotate the shaft in the other direction. I have the link here to the manual
Please look at pages 46-48.
What type of transmission is this? I am pretty sure it is hydraulic since is has a large fill cap. The whole trans is very compact, and capable of some high torque output at low speeds. This got my mind spinning about the possibility of two of them being employed in an AATV. This would solve some of the problems others have stated about hydraulics eliminating weight and bulk of pumps, motors, hoses, and reservoir.
I am at a dead end in my research about this, b/c I don't know what it is called. I google hydrostatic variators and came always to things like this
Any ideas and help would be great.
Please look at pages 46-48.
What type of transmission is this? I am pretty sure it is hydraulic since is has a large fill cap. The whole trans is very compact, and capable of some high torque output at low speeds. This got my mind spinning about the possibility of two of them being employed in an AATV. This would solve some of the problems others have stated about hydraulics eliminating weight and bulk of pumps, motors, hoses, and reservoir.
I am at a dead end in my research about this, b/c I don't know what it is called. I google hydrostatic variators and came always to things like this
Any ideas and help would be great.
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