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#1 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Port Deposit, MD
Posts: 259
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I'm just wondering out loud here....
These are tractors we're looking and and being that they built for work, why do OEMs seem to only post HP numbers? Torque is power, so what we really need to see is how much torque the motor produces and at what RPMs. HP is just a number based on torque and rpms anyways. I wish these manufacturers would start publishing torque curves for the motors used in their tractors. If we could see them, then we would have a better idea on why some lower HP tractors are rated for more lifting and pulling; even being able to pull it's own weight around. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Batavia, NY
Posts: 643
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HP is something the average public thinks they understand, so it is used the sell the tractors. Most of the public doesn't understand that lots of HP in a little tractor doesn't necessarily get the job done.
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Galen LaWall Your Mahindra Tractor Dealer 185 Pearl Street Batavia, New York 14020 585.343.0770 |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: central New York
Posts: 2,801
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Joe, there is so much that goes into it and torque is an important part of the power on the tractors. Good torque goes along way towards holding engine speed under varying loads.
The weight, and where it is positioned makes a big difference in performance while pulling loads or climbing hills or going down them! There is nothing better then a good performing tractor, horsepower , torque and weight distribution are good starting points but they can not over come a bad set of tires for pulling! We used to use a older cadet with a hydro to pull dead tractors into our shop. It was 14 hosepower with a hydro, and with a little coaching it pulled 15,000lb tractors all day long! |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: So. Maine
Posts: 173
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Kioti used to spec torque and horsepower numbers for their various engines on their web site and in the specific brouchers in graph form. I haven't checked their web site for some time, so don't take my word for it
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 1,550
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Quote:
hp it produces can not. HP is a measure of work. Torque is a measure of force. A force that causes no motion, produces no work. I wish manufacturers would be more up front about publishing WEIGHTs. One has to dig deep into specs to find this out, for tractors or other vehicles. All the multiplied torque in the world can only move something if it has TRACTION, a function of weight and friction.
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See my TBN projects at: http://hometown.aol.com/dkrug/page1.html Kubota B21 rebuild 1 cy FEL bucket custom b/h thumb custom b/h subframe Diesel fuel dispenser Bucket dentistry custom hydraulic b/h thumb |
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#6 (permalink) | |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 110
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Quote:
Equipment is advertised by horsepower because the engineers that build them know that it's all that matters. This myth that torque determines performance is something that the old muscle car racers dreamed up based upon their skewed misunderstanding of physics. It's a myth that's become stuck in the minds of a lot of folks but it's wrong. Torque is just a component of horsepower, it's not "torque vs. horsepower". It's like bragging on Aunt Sallie's delicious cake then getting hung up on what type of baking powder powder she used. It really doesn't matter as long as the end result is a good cake. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Amanda, OH
Posts: 249
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Quote:
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Port Deposit, MD
Posts: 259
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Quote:
I can not agree HP is power because it's just a number derived from torque and engine speed. Your example of the tanks is really deceiving to me because, logically, it seems gearing can give you speed. And no matter how much engine speed you have, if you don't have enough "Force" to get the weight moving, it ain't moving, regardless of the engine speed. Years ago, someone explained it to me like this. Torque is power because it's used to move weight, and HP was speed; assuming you had enough torque to move it in the 1st place. Based on that tank example and what was told to me, the engineers made sure that the M1 had enough torque to be able to move the tank, but put it into a faster spinning motor to get it moving faster. If you think about it, they could have used gearing instead of engine speed to get the old tanks to move faster. I'm guessing they didn't do it for a number a reasons. one being size. It takes less volume to increase engine speed then to add gears; less eight too. So if HP is just a number derived from T and R, how does it really mean anything other then marketing? HP marketing makes sense, when it was invented, because at that time, people understood how much work 1 horse could do. BTW how did they ever come up with using 5252 to get HP, why not use 5000 to make it seem as if they were giving more horses? |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: WI
Posts: 4,872
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Quote:
I will, if you tell me why you think it doesn't! (Here's a hint -> they are the same) A diesel will generally "feel" more powerful because it has more torque at a lower RPM. This is not always the case. Old Fords (172 cid 4 cylinder) were available in gas and diesel. Same bore x stroke and # of cylinders. Guess what? The GAS engine had more torque and more HP at EVERY rpm. That is a historical fact that you can easily verify. On your question, if you set the rpm's of your theoretical 60hp engines so that both are at the point where they make 60 hp, you can put them on a dyno and will get 60 hp. The gas engine may have to be rev'ed up higher than the diesel engine, so if you only test them at identical RPM's the diesel will make a better showing.
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#10 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Northeast South Dakota
Posts: 76
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power = the amount of work done or energy transferred per unit of time
torque has nothing to do with time a five pound weight sittting on a one foot wrench is 5 ft/lbs even if it is sitting on there for an hour |
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