Always in these RPM discussions there is the theory proposed that the engine is designed to run at X rpm, which is the speed for 540 pto speed, and that is the RPM you should always run at.
I’m not buying that. As far as I can tell after running tractors for 45 years is that tractors are designed to have peak HP at the RPMs where you get the standard the 540 rpm on the PTO. This will give you peak performance such as using the MMM, and lots of other stuff. And the tractor is designed to run at this speed as much as the operator wants with no damage or excessive wear. This is not no wear and not minimal wear, it is acceptable wear to get acceptable tractor life.
But. 1) the engine is actually designed to run at a range of RPMs with no problem. 2) it’s vey rarely you need max performance, 3) minimum wear will be at a lower RPM, given your not lugging. Lugging puts excessive torque in the system, which is wear.
On my bx, when using the MMM i run at the speed where I get sufficient performance for the conditions and not close to lugging. High wet spring grass , 2800-3000. Dry thin summer grass 2500. Loader operating, don’t need much power at all, 1900-2000 is all i need, driving around, 1800.
And my manual says, don’t run excessive RPMs for the task.
Max performance is going to be designed close to WOT because it doesn’t make sense to run a higher RPMs where the torq drops off so fast the HP goes down above that speed, and that is more wear for no benefit.
But I would bet a lot of money that if you tested scientifically, you would find any RPM less than WOT that gets the job done is less wear as long as your not lugging. The motor needs to turning smoothly, no smoke.
That said, I’m not saying you shouldn’t run WOT if you want the performance, sometimes the extra performance is worth cost of acceptably more wear.
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