Does digging force equate to lifting force?

   / Does digging force equate to lifting force? #1  

MrWhippy

Gold Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2011
Messages
295
Location
Maryland
Tractor
Ford 1710, Ford 5600, NH Workmaster 55
By that I mean,

If a backhoe has 4100 lbs of bucket digging force, would that equate to being able to curl the bucket and lifting 4100lbs of something, or would the lower dipper digging force limit that?
 
   / Does digging force equate to lifting force? #2  
No it does not.

The 4,100 rating is misleading to the consumer
for a number of reasons.


The 4.100 pound rating could be either
the relief setting for the specific function
spool in question or the actual main relief
cartridge of the tractor in question.


The upper boom, dipper boom and the bucket
digging cylinder all act independently.


The upper boom only lifts and lowers both
the dipper boom and digging bucket.


The lower boom(dipper boom)only extends
and retracts the bucket cylinder and bucket.


The breakout force refers to the force required
to break the grip of the material being excavated.


The actual resistance encountered by the square
area of the digging edge(s) and teeth if any
encountered and overcome to excavate the
compacted material, this itself is regulated
by the normal system operating pressure and
the over pressure relief setting.
 
   / Does digging force equate to lifting force? #3  
Also, cylinders are stronger extending than retracting (more surface area to push against.) All backhoes are built to extended on the dig stroke, not the lift. FELs are built to extend on the lift stroke.
 
 
 
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