LD1
Epic Contributor
I am going to try again. Please have patience with me and try to follow me through this. I think we are all getting a little tired...
I am going to talk about the top link again because I think that is a sticking point. I would like to use the A, B, B' C, D picture we used before. It would probably be best if whoever reads this draws a little picture on a piece of paper like the picture I posted before. Without the picture no one could follow what I have written. So Please, please, get the picture in front of you when you read this.
Lets say we have a weight box hooked up at AC. Lets say top link AB is horizontal and lets also say lower link CD is horizontal. When everything is horizontal like this the 3ph lift links (which I never showed in my picture) are holding up the weight box and there is no weigh shift onto D. The only thing top link AB is doing is preventing the weight box from pivoting about ball eyes C and dumping out on the ground.
If we wanted, would could have a friend walk to the back of the weight box and push on it to hold it up. We could then even take the top link off. The amount of force our friend has to push is the same as the tension needed in the top link. We always need that amount of horizontal force to keep the box from falling. We could raise or lower our weight box and our buddy would always have to keep pushing with the same amount of horizontal force.
Now lets pretend point B on the tractor, where the top link connects to, is actually on a sliding vertical rail. With this sliding rail we can keep the top link always horizontal. Now that we can have the top link point B stay horizontal, we can hook it up and tell our friend to let go.
We can raise and lower our box, with our sliding link that always stays horizontal. The tension in that top link is always the same. Like you have said, if we raise the box such that C is higher than D, weight gets shifted through the lower link onto D.
Remember we always need that same amount of horizontal force at A to keep out box from falling over, either by the tension in the top link or our friend pushing against the box.
With our box raised (C is above point D) lets say we want to lower top link point B. We get our friend back out to push on the back of the box (with that same horizontal force) and unhook our top link, make it longer so we can hook it up at a point lower, something like our original point B. We put the pin back in and tell our friend to let go. The tension in the top link, now that we have connected it back at point B, has gone up. Even though our box has remained level (the line AC is still vertical).
Lets tell our friend to come around to the front of the box, stand between the box and the tractor, and have him hold onto that top link while we pull the pin out at B. He is going to have to pull on the top link pretty hard. In fact, the lower we tell him to pivot that top link, the closer he gets it to vertical, the harder he has to pull on it.
If he gets that link at a 45% angle to the ground, half of his pulling force is in the horizontal direction (to keep that box from tipping around the ball eye). The other half of his pulling force is in the vertical direction. In effect, he is pulling down on the weight box.
This is how tension in the top link has a contribution to the load at the ball eyes. When the angle of the top link is the same as the angle of the lower link, the weight shift that you have spoken of still happens. However, the friend pulling on the top link is pulling down with the same amount of weight (force) as what is being shifted.
If the top link angle is closer to horizontal than the lower link, your weight shift is greater than the force from the top link. If the top link is closer to vertical than the lower link, your weight shift is less than the force added from the top link.
Excellent way of explaining it. I dont think I have worded it any better.:thumbsup: