I think this is an old wives tale from the young fools drag racing days where everyone thought a standard was the only way to go. The old turbo 400s lost as bit of power in the clutches but not nearly that much and it wasn't so much that it took that 50-60HP to turn the tranny, just lost a bit on the low end due to slippage. Todays transmissions are much more efficient.i know an auto tranny in a car say a turbo 400 takes 50-60 horse power to turn so maybe 10-15 hp on a hst tractor
I have both geared and HST tractors. The small Kubota B26 with backhoe will run out of traction before it runs out of power. I think the world average is about 2 HP lost vs same tractor with gear drive. I think someone already stated that if you are doing loader work and lots of forward reverse action, and HST is the best but it you are mowing straight line in a large pasture or using tillage equipment all day long a gear drive might be more suited. The one thing I like the gear drive over the HST is that I don't have to have a foot on the GO pedal all the time and that leaves both feet free to do braking and clutching. A few HST tractors will have a clutch also and maybe one will have the brakes on the left and HST pedal on the right but most have brakes on the same side as the HST pedal so it in nearly impossible to use the breaks for steering, that is assuming the tractor has steering brakes. Some only have one brake pedal which for me would be an automatic pass by on buying a tractor but some folks don't need them. To me a steering brake on a tractor is like a concealed weapon, its not very useful until you really need it.
I use the steering brakes to keep the tractor going my direction when back dragging or going forward but just using the heel of the bucket to smooth out muddy ruts with the FEL. Without using the brakes, it tends to drift to the high side which has more drag. It is difficult with the Kubota as the brakes are on the same side as the HST pedal just as most tractors are. SOMEONE jump in here with a model where the brakes are on the left side as I know there are a few that are that way.That is a really good point I never thought about. Is the pedal for HST usually on the same side as the brakes?
My gear Kioti has cutting brakes and I never thought I would use them until this Winter....pushing snow with the FEL I discovered the GREAT steering you get from them. The front wheels are useless on the ice, but the brakes work awesome for steering!
I use the steering brakes to keep the tractor going my direction when back dragging or going forward but just using the heel of the bucket to smooth out muddy ruts with the FEL. Without using the brakes, it tends to drift to the high side which has more drag. It is difficult with the Kubota as the brakes are on the same side as the HST pedal just as most tractors are. SOMEONE jump in here with a model where the brakes are on the left side as I know there are a few that are that way.