Ok, first sorry for the length of this. I’ve tried 3 times to write this and make it shorter have failed. So much appreciation and kudos to anyone who hangs with me on this.
I’ve been thinking about some things (dangerous for me to do that), and I have a question about the practical application of torque, hp, and rpm’s. I understand (I think, someone might chime in and tell me I actually don’t) the basics of what torque and hp are, and I understand the equation for torque and hp. The old adage I’ve heard is that torque is the amount of capability of work, hp is how fast you can get it done. That makes sense to me.
But when I think about how this applies I tend to find myself in a loop of circular logic. This stems from a discussion with a friend of mine about my tractor. I’ve got an L2501, gear driven. Engine hp is ~25, pto hp is ~20, right? Ok, so it’s a 540 pto. It’s got a 100 cubic inch engine, and has more torque, and achieves the 540 pto rpm at a much lower engine rpm.
Ok, so if you’re still with me, here’s where I’m getting fuzzy. Again mine is a gear driven tractor, and I’ve put my tractor through some pretty tough tasks of bush hogging and tilling, through some really rough brush, really high weeds, really hard ground, and on some pretty decent inclines. I have yet to find a situation where, if the load gets heavy on the tractor, I cannot simply give it a little foot throttle to keep my engine rpm’s at around 2000 and breeze right through it.
So to get to my question, say you did a side by side with an L3400. It’s my understanding that the L2501 engine is close to the one that the L3400 had, governed and geared so that the rated hp is ~25 to put 540 at the pto. Ok, if that is correct, then the disadvantage of the 2501 is that at load where pto is running 540, you’re at less hp and so the tractor is going slower. Is that right? Because a pto running at 540 rpm is a pto running at 540 rpm, in my mind it shouldn’t matter if tractor running the implement is at 40 hp or at 30. Is my thinking straight on that?
Given that assumption is correct, then if your max engine rpm was such that it allowed you to grab a higher gear and give more throttle so that your engine rpm was where it needed to be to spin the pto at 540, what disadvantage are you at with the L2501? If this is true then hp for the 2501 is less a disadvantage than the widely spaced gear speeds, and things like the non-live pto for the DT become more important a consideration than the hp.
I don’t know, maybe I’ve got all this wrong, or maybe one fundamental point wrong that is causing everything else to derail. Any thoughts or input or discussion is welcomed, and if I’m flat wrong about everything and you want to call me a dummy I’m fine with that too.
I’ve been thinking about some things (dangerous for me to do that), and I have a question about the practical application of torque, hp, and rpm’s. I understand (I think, someone might chime in and tell me I actually don’t) the basics of what torque and hp are, and I understand the equation for torque and hp. The old adage I’ve heard is that torque is the amount of capability of work, hp is how fast you can get it done. That makes sense to me.
But when I think about how this applies I tend to find myself in a loop of circular logic. This stems from a discussion with a friend of mine about my tractor. I’ve got an L2501, gear driven. Engine hp is ~25, pto hp is ~20, right? Ok, so it’s a 540 pto. It’s got a 100 cubic inch engine, and has more torque, and achieves the 540 pto rpm at a much lower engine rpm.
Ok, so if you’re still with me, here’s where I’m getting fuzzy. Again mine is a gear driven tractor, and I’ve put my tractor through some pretty tough tasks of bush hogging and tilling, through some really rough brush, really high weeds, really hard ground, and on some pretty decent inclines. I have yet to find a situation where, if the load gets heavy on the tractor, I cannot simply give it a little foot throttle to keep my engine rpm’s at around 2000 and breeze right through it.
So to get to my question, say you did a side by side with an L3400. It’s my understanding that the L2501 engine is close to the one that the L3400 had, governed and geared so that the rated hp is ~25 to put 540 at the pto. Ok, if that is correct, then the disadvantage of the 2501 is that at load where pto is running 540, you’re at less hp and so the tractor is going slower. Is that right? Because a pto running at 540 rpm is a pto running at 540 rpm, in my mind it shouldn’t matter if tractor running the implement is at 40 hp or at 30. Is my thinking straight on that?
Given that assumption is correct, then if your max engine rpm was such that it allowed you to grab a higher gear and give more throttle so that your engine rpm was where it needed to be to spin the pto at 540, what disadvantage are you at with the L2501? If this is true then hp for the 2501 is less a disadvantage than the widely spaced gear speeds, and things like the non-live pto for the DT become more important a consideration than the hp.
I don’t know, maybe I’ve got all this wrong, or maybe one fundamental point wrong that is causing everything else to derail. Any thoughts or input or discussion is welcomed, and if I’m flat wrong about everything and you want to call me a dummy I’m fine with that too.