Jeff, if the hose is marked 1 1/4" then the inside diameter is that size. That is capable of a LOT of flow and it will really help if munchies gets the pump number to verify it. What we CAN vary is the speed (flow) but we have to always make enough pressure. The design of any APU must make the pump so it will not stall the engine (thus use 1500 not operating pres. 1350 for design).
Here is a chart with hose flows and instead of using 25 feet/second I will drop back to 15 fps (smaller hose is usually moving faster).
http://www.ryco.com.au/index.php?id=196
If a 1.25" is moving at 25 fps then the flow by that chart is 90+ gals/minute.
If it is moving at 15 fps then the flow is 60 gpm.
The last series of calculations (above post) was specific to the 16 horsepower engine and the 1350#. Nothing changes from the prior calculation, using 1500# still gives a pump that is about 2.3 cubic inch per revolution for the 16 hp engine and it is capable of pumping around (just under) 20 gpm.
Now if the OEM pump pumps 60 and our APU can pump 20, it will move at 1/3 speed (33%) , but if the OEM pump is pumping 90 then it will move at 2/9 or about 22% of the normal maximum speed.
Now lets go back and figure how much horsepower the OEM is using at the higher flow, for comparison. Using the formula (Q x P) / 1714 = HP I plug in our values:
(90 x 1350) / 1714 = 71 hp
(90 x 1500) / 1714 = 79
(60 x 1350) / 1714 = 47
(60 x 1500) / 1714 = 53
So we have developed a range using 60 gpm and 90 gpm for the 1350 operating pressure and the 1500 design pressure.... resulting in from 47 to 79 HP.
I would think one hardly ever uses the full maximum capacity of this machine of either the speed or the lift capacity.
We need the OEM pump data to fine tune our numbers, since it is a large amount of flow...but the engine Matt (VI) pictured above is looking better all the time for a full capacity APU, especially if one wants to use the OEM pump and just mount it on the engine, taking it off the transfer case.
We can figure any engine hp and pump combination since we know how much pressure we have to make... and then calculate the speed in relation to the OEM speed (once we verify the OEM pump info.). Note all calculations are based on 1800 rpm.
What I can tell you for sure is that if you use the 16 hp engine at 1800, you need a pump that is 2.3 cu.in/r size and that it will move from 22 to 33% of it's normal speed.
Does this make sense to you?