I have an L3800 HST with about 25 hrs on it - mainly from FEL work. I just leave it in 4WD and use it all the time in this mode. Does it hurt anything to leave the unit in 4WD - when using it in either Low or Medium range on grass and sand ?
From my understanding it is always the same. If there is an differential or visco-clutch that is handling the differences of the front and rear axle, it should work. But it will of course use up the lifetime of that device. If the manufacturer has calculated only 30% of 4wd-use it will not as long survive as the rest of the tractor...I have an L3800 HST with about 25 hrs on it - mainly from FEL work. I just leave it in 4WD and use it all the time in this mode. Does it hurt anything to leave the unit in 4WD - when using it in either Low or Medium range on grass and sand ?
No, you are not straining your 4wd with a disc harrow in the field. Most of the posts in this thread do not seem to understand how 4wd (or front wheel assist)works. Basically, when in 2wd you are really in 1wd because as soon as 1 wheel hits a slippy spot that wheel starts spinning and you are going nowhere. With 4wd engaged the front wheels are spinning slightly faster than the rears and can pull you out. At no stage, with a normal compact tractor do you ever have 4wd. You will have 1 back wheel and 1 front wheel working unless you engage the diff lock (in which case you will have 2 rear wheels and 1 front wheel working). If your tyres are sized properly for your tractor, then driving in 4wd on soil or sand (or any other moveable surface) will not adversely affect your tractor, whether you are going straight or turning.Glad I came across this thread today. I have ~28 hours on my L2501, and I would say 90% of them have been with the tractor stuck in 4wd. Ive been working almost entirely on the same single project since I got my tractor back in May - clearing woods to expand our yard, so its a lot of loader work, lifting heavy logs, pushing tree tops into piles for burning, then box blading the area, then running a disc harrow. I have tried a few times to just run in 2wd but seem to hit something just 20 minutes later that needs 4wd, so I have just left it in there. I was just under the assumption that its made to work, and work in 4wd so no big deal. I guess I need to rethink that and be more conscious of taking it out of 4wd.
On some of the scenarios I may could get by by engaging the Differential lock instead of 4wd. Is this a better solution? If say I just have to make a short, but heavy run of something, to just hold the differential lock in for that duration? What are the limitations of the differential lock? I think Ive only ever used it like 2 or 3 times. I find it hard to tell if its engaged, and Im a small, thin build dude, so I find pressing and holding the pedal in a little cumbersome, it has so much resistance to hold it in. With my Disc harrow, the tractor will not even pull it without 4wd. It is a bit too big really for my little L2501, but does a fine job in 4wd. Based on what Ive read here though I'm likely putting a lot of strain on my front end pulling it.
No, you are not straining your 4wd with a disc harrow in the field. Most of the posts in this thread do not seem to understand how 4wd (or front wheel assist)works. Basically, when in 2wd you are really in 1wd because as soon as 1 wheel hits a slippy spot that wheel starts spinning and you are going nowhere. With 4wd engaged the front wheels are spinning slightly faster than the rears and can pull you out. At no stage, with a normal compact tractor do you ever have 4wd. You will have 1 back wheel and 1 front wheel working unless you engage the diff lock (in which case you will have 2 rear wheels and 1 front wheel working). If your tyres are sized properly for your tractor, then driving in 4wd on soil or sand (or any other moveable surface) will not adversely affect your tractor, whether you are going straight or turning.
However, trying to turn with the diff lock engaged will put tremendous strain on everything because the 2 back wheels are locked together and therefore both wheels want to travel the same distance at the same speed.
Basically, on a standard compact:
2wd=1wd
2wd+diff=2wd(both rear)
4wd=2wd(1 front+one rear)
4wd+diff=3wd(both rear +one front)
It it NOT recommended to use 4wd or diff lock on solid surfaces except for loader work where you are losing traction on the rear and are basically in 1 wheel drive (1 front wheel but both front wheels will be your braking wheels because they are connected to your back wheels via the driveshaft)
^^^^Your tractor is built differently from a truck or car- the components are heavier. Plus, all of the drivetrain turns all the time, whether 4WD is engaged or not. So, minus the load imposed on the drivetrain, the parts are still wearing out. If you are using the loader a lot, then being in 4wd distributes the work load to the whole drivetrain, which eases the load on the back axle. There are many pieces of equipment, like wheel loaders, ditch witches, etc. which are in 4wd all the time- they have been designed that way. I'd say don't sweat it, unless you are on hard surface- you will put excessive load on the drivetrain doing that. Otherwise, use it for what it was made for.
I got a chuckle out of hope to float's post. Thanks for clarifying it for those who really don't get it.It’s not an accurate description of what’s going on to say in 2 wd you have 1 wd, and 4 wd you have 2 wheel, one front one back .
Differentials are one of the most misunderstood things, post #30 in this thread I explained what’s actually happening in a open differential and how they behave. You didn’t waste your money on 4wd, you actually have 4wd.