I think BeeX was the first to bring up the torque curve being different between gas and diesel engines. But I do not think he specifically addressed the rising torque curve of many diesel engines as compared to the falling torque curve of many gasoline engines.
Given the two engine types, if both were connected to identical gear trains doing identical work at rated PTO speed, and the load increased, with nothing else changing, they both would tend to slow down. BUT the characteristic of the diesel engine, that torque increases with RPM loss, wins out, as the load will end up causing less RPM drop on the system using the diesel engine, as compared to the gasoline engine.
For me, in practical terms this means that worst case the diesel may slow down and chug through the task at hand, where the gasoline engine may just slow down and stall out. Granted, in the VERY WORST case, BOTH would stall out. I have proven that time and again, when getting overly aggressive with my loader...
But in my mind, for tractor work, the diesel is the winner on average.
Given the two engine types, if both were connected to identical gear trains doing identical work at rated PTO speed, and the load increased, with nothing else changing, they both would tend to slow down. BUT the characteristic of the diesel engine, that torque increases with RPM loss, wins out, as the load will end up causing less RPM drop on the system using the diesel engine, as compared to the gasoline engine.
For me, in practical terms this means that worst case the diesel may slow down and chug through the task at hand, where the gasoline engine may just slow down and stall out. Granted, in the VERY WORST case, BOTH would stall out. I have proven that time and again, when getting overly aggressive with my loader...
But in my mind, for tractor work, the diesel is the winner on average.