I may have had a bran-pharrt.... I searched and didn’t have any success...but there was a thread where the question posed was to the effect “How many hours equal how many miles?” .... and I didn’t get a chance to start any controversy.... so here goes:
I keep detailed records of my machinery, including daily operations. For example, the spiral notebook where I keep my tractor records have entries such as:
===========
1/18/21 472.3 hrs Graded road. Blew out radiator and primary air filter. Refueled with 3 gals.
2/05/21 475.1 hrs Greased all zerks w/lithium and FEl with moly. Replaced front LED lightbar switch. Mowed with finish-mower.
3/19/21 477.9 hrs Ckd tire press F-29 R-19 OK. Moved logs with FEL for splitting. Rinsed tractor w/hose, blo-dry. Repaired broken Rt tail light connector (replaced w/splice). Refueled with 2 gals.
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If a walking person averages 3 mph (according to tradition and Google)... and if we operate our tractors at a “walk”.... each hour would equal 3 miles.... Right?
So 100 hours would equal 300 miles.... and a tractor with 2K hours would have similar wear to a vehicle with 6,000 miles at most.
If a tractor is used in a stationary or back-and-forth (as in loader-work) then the mileage comparison may not be similar but the wear-rate on transmission/clutch components would increase commensurately.
Anyway...I don’t know that this is a valid method to compare since I’ve seen cars with low miles in terrible condition and others with high mileage in excellent shape. Personally, I feel that accurate service and maintenance records are very important when evaluating any type of machine, and is why I keep detailed records which anyone who reads them will recognize they were made contemporaneously.
Hope this is helpful to others.
I keep detailed records of my machinery, including daily operations. For example, the spiral notebook where I keep my tractor records have entries such as:
===========
1/18/21 472.3 hrs Graded road. Blew out radiator and primary air filter. Refueled with 3 gals.
2/05/21 475.1 hrs Greased all zerks w/lithium and FEl with moly. Replaced front LED lightbar switch. Mowed with finish-mower.
3/19/21 477.9 hrs Ckd tire press F-29 R-19 OK. Moved logs with FEL for splitting. Rinsed tractor w/hose, blo-dry. Repaired broken Rt tail light connector (replaced w/splice). Refueled with 2 gals.
============
If a walking person averages 3 mph (according to tradition and Google)... and if we operate our tractors at a “walk”.... each hour would equal 3 miles.... Right?
So 100 hours would equal 300 miles.... and a tractor with 2K hours would have similar wear to a vehicle with 6,000 miles at most.
If a tractor is used in a stationary or back-and-forth (as in loader-work) then the mileage comparison may not be similar but the wear-rate on transmission/clutch components would increase commensurately.
Anyway...I don’t know that this is a valid method to compare since I’ve seen cars with low miles in terrible condition and others with high mileage in excellent shape. Personally, I feel that accurate service and maintenance records are very important when evaluating any type of machine, and is why I keep detailed records which anyone who reads them will recognize they were made contemporaneously.
Hope this is helpful to others.