Scored a log splitter!

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LYHTSPD

Member
Apr 7, 2011
62
SW Indiana
A friend from work and I have been talking about building our own log splitter for a month or so now. He was hunting at his leased land this weekend and found an older log splitter hidden in a thicket of small trees. The trees that had grown up around it were at least 5 years old, so who knows how long this thing has been sitting out in the weather. He talked to the owner, and he had forgotten he even had it. He said we can do with it what we please. ::-)

It turns out is it (or at least I think it is, from what I can tell) a Brave Warrior 8hp, 26ton horizontal/vertical log splitter. The engine is a B&S. It is in pretty rough shape though. The tires are shot and I am sure we will have to replace the hoses, but he said that the hydraulic fluid did not look too bad. There looks to be some minor surface rust as well.

It looks very similar to this splitter, but it is red in color. From what I have read on these forums, this is a pretty good splitter. I just hope we don't sink a lot of money into getting it running again.
 
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Good score.
At a bare minimum you have the starting point of the frame tank and trailer.

If the cylinder was retracted and chrome finish is good you shouldn't be too bad off getting replacement hoses made at a local supplier
Post some pics and I'm sure everyone here can chime in
 
The cylinder was/is extended, but the cylinder rod does not look pitted or anything. I am trying to get the pictures from my friend's phone so I can post them.
 
Sounds like it died where it sat with the cylinder out.

Does it have a horizontal or veritical shaft engine? donor vertical shafts are pretty easy to come by off lawn tractors
 
A friend from work and I have been talking about building our own log splitter for a month or so now. He was hunting at his leased land this weekend and found an older log splitter hidden in a thicket of small trees. The trees that had grown up around it were at least 5 years old, so who knows how long this thing has been sitting out in the weather. He talked to the owner, and he had forgotten he even had it. He said we can do with it what we please. ::-)

It turns out is it (or at least I think it is, from what I can tell) a Brave Warrior 8hp, 26ton horizontal/vertical log splitter. The engine is a B&S. It is in pretty rough shape though. The tires are shot and I am sure we will have to replace the hoses, but he said that the hydraulic fluid did not look too bad. There looks to be some minor surface rust as well.

It looks very similar to this splitter, but it is red in color. From what I have read on these forums, this is a pretty good splitter. I just hope we don't sink a lot of money into getting it running again.

If it has been sitting out there for that many years I think replacing the hydraulic fluid would definitely be on my to do list if I hoped to resurrect this splitter.
 
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Well, I finally got the pictures sent to me. It is a little rougher than what I originally thought. The cylinder rod is pretty bad, and will probably have to be rebuild and re-chromed. I am sure all the fluids will have to be replaced. It looks like a horizontal shaft engine, so I hope it is still salvageable. Luckily, I know a lot of people in the hydraulics manufacturing area and they may be able to help us with the cylinder rebuild and hoses.











 
By the time you re-chrome and add seals you'll probably be better servered to just buy a new hydo cylinder
Looks like 4x24 somewhere around $260 new.

You could get by for now by cleaning just the rust pitts(do it before retracting at the very least) and I've heard of people filling and sanding them with JB weld.
A little hydo fluid leak isn't that big a deal.
 
Starting out at the right price :) Free!
Sink less than $5 - 700 in it in new parts & you have a very well made, new splitter ;)

Nice score ;)
 
I'd take a piece of scotchbrite to the cylinder rod and see if the pitting smooths out. If it does, I'd run it as is until it leaks.

Maybe a quieter muffler for that Briggs (you can order a Lo-Tone muffler from a generator) and new hoses and tires. Run it and make sure it all works, then change the hydro filter and call it good. I'd only change that hydro oil if it was discolored or otherwise contaminated.

Doesn't get better than free.
 
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Scotch brite pad or emery paper on the rod. Buff it right up. Probably last for quite a while. Not sure about the motor - do what you gotta do. Go to your nearest farm store and pick up standard hoses for the replacements (cheap). I can't see having too much cash invested and yet coming out the other end you will have a fine splitter.
 
Well, I finally got the pictures sent to me. It is a little rougher than what I originally thought. The cylinder rod is pretty bad, and will probably have to be rebuild and re-chromed. I am sure all the fluids will have to be replaced. It looks like a horizontal shaft engine, so I hope it is still salvageable. Luckily, I know a lot of people in the hydraulics manufacturing area and they may be able to help us with the cylinder rebuild and hoses.











The rod doesn't look bad in the photos. Obviously if it leaks it needs rebuilt. I had one rebuilt. It cost $60 in rings. I installed them myself. It looks like there is a c-ring held in place by internal pressure that keeps the outer plate in place in your cylinder. You remove the c-ring by pushing the plate in, towards the rear (with a hammer) then release the c-ring which sits in a groove in the outet wall of the cyliner.
 
Big progress this weekend. My friend dragged the splitter out of the woods and loaded onto his truck. We got it back to his house and started to really take a good look at it. We flushed the fuel system as best we could, cleaned out the carburetor and gas tank and filled it with fresh gas. The spark plug wire was chewed through, so we patched that for now. We taped up the hydraulic return line that was chewed up and checked a few other things.

We then disconnected the hydraulic pump from the engine and gave her a pull. We had spark and fuel, and it almost started on the first pull of the cord. We had to feed it some starter fluid, but it actually came to life without too much fuss! We let it run for about ten minutes, shut it off and changed the oil. A friend came over who rebuilds hydraulics for a living and said that the cylinder rod looked pretty good, and after a little love with a scotch pad it looked even better. He took a look at the hydraulic fluid and said that it should be fine for doing a test run, but we should change it out just to be safe.

Then we hooked up the pump to the engine, and ran a few cycles. There is a small leak around the hydraulic filter, but is looks to a hose issue. We actually split a few pieces of wood as well!.



Of course, since the tires were flat we just left if in the back of his truck and ran it. One tire holds air, but the other will probably need at least a tube put in it. The engine still sounds a little rough, so we are hoping that after a deep cleaning and maybe some Seafoam, it will smooth out a little. The adventure continues!
 
Sounds cool, always nice to ressurect someone elses "junk". When I was a kid, almost all our bicycles got picked out of the trash during junk week. We always were swapping parts around and then trashing the bikes so we could fix them again.
 
You can't beat free "piece of junk" in one man's eyes that works .

I'd caution against splitting/loading it until you get atleast the pressure hose changed.

Personal experience -my old boss on the farm would agree with me, the hose is cheaper than impregnated oil injury and ER visit.
 
Well, the pressurized side of the hydraulic line is hard piped and it is in good shape. The hose that is questionable is the return line from the extended side of the cylinder back to the tank, which should be under minimal pressure. We are going to replace that tonight, as well as start on some of the engine cleaning.
 
Yeah but you have a line from the pump to your valve block.
Thats the one i'd be worried about. If its been sitting outside for a long while I wouldn't trust it
 
Yeah but you have a line from the pump to your valve block.
Thats the one i'd be worried about. If its been sitting outside for a long while I wouldn't trust it

I looked that hose over really well and found a weak spot, so that is going to get replaced as well.

I do have a call for help though. It looks like the engine is missing a few springs and control rods on the throttle components. I have all the manuals for the splitter, the engine and the parts list, but I can't make heads or tails of what I am missing and where it goes. Does anyone have a Briggs and Stratton 8hp engine they could take a picture of so I can find out what I am missing? The model number for the engine is 192432-1035-E1, and it seems that is a pretty common engine on a lot of different equipment. I think that any engine with the 192400 model code would work. Any help would be appreciated.
 
Don't know if this is the same model. It's identical to the one I fixed a few weeks ago on a free early 90's 8hp briggs Snapper mower.
 
Thanks basod, but my linkage looks a bit different than that. I don't know why I didn't think to hit youtube though.

Here is a screen shot from the parts guide of the control bracket and the governor lever that is on my engine.

 
IMG_0017.JPGIMG_0018.JPG Here's a couple pics - I know not exactly great detail, and not the exact same. It does appear similar and the engine numbers are the same
In the above exploded view 227 governor linkage the linkage 212B conects from the top hole to the throttle on the carb, the srpring goes over it and attaches to the lower hole and smaller hole on the throttle.
One of those springs(209's or 211) should connect to the lower govermor arm hole(227) and I'd assume somewhere on the back or front of the manual throttle assembly 222C.
 
Thanks again for all the pics and advice basod. I finally realized that nothing was missing. I guess I just did not know how the governor really worked.

Now, I have another problem. I was taking the carburetor apart to put some new parts in, when I found out that the main jet was seized. After stripping out the slot in the brass, I then broke a screw extractor out in the jet. So now, I need a whole new carb. Do you guys know where I can get a used carb, or one similar enough that would work? Here is the info on the motor and carb:
Motor - B&S 8HP motor, 192432-1035-E1
Carb - Walbro LMT, 5-4993

Any help you guys can give, would be greatly appreciated.
 
Thanks again for all the pics and advice basod. I finally realized that nothing was missing. I guess I just did not know how the governor really worked.

Now, I have another problem. I was taking the carburetor apart to put some new parts in, when I found out that the main jet was seized. After stripping out the slot in the brass, I then broke a screw extractor out in the jet. So now, I need a whole new carb. Do you guys know where I can get a used carb, or one similar enough that would work? Here is the info on the motor and carb:
Motor - B&S 8HP motor, 192432-1035-E1
Carb - Walbro LMT, 5-4993

Any help you guys can give, would be greatly appreciated.

Walbro LMT carbs are pretty popular.

The date code on the engine will matter. Briggs Part #'s as follows:

498838 - Carburetor | (LMT 119) Used After Code Date 97052500 Used Before Code Date 98032300
690119 - Carburetor | Used After Code Date 98032200

Early carb is roughly $136 and the later carb is roughly $100.

http://www.jackssmallengines.com

This link may or may not work - Link to your specific engine/carburetor IPL
 
When you start talking $100+ for a new carb.
I'd start to think new/donor engine.

I guess you drilled the jet out to get the easy out in? If you can get a pair of jewelers needle nose pliers in and turn the broke off bit to the right they typically come right off
I've been able to clean a stuck jet in place with a set of acetylene torch tip cleaners
 
I've been able to clean a stuck jet in place with a set of acetylene torch tip cleaners

Yep - wont work on a carb without it and compressed air.;)
 
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