SPYDERLK
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2006
- Messages
- 10,329
- Location
- VA
- Tractor
- JD2010, Kubota3450,2550, Mahindra 7520 w FEL w Skid Steer QC w/Tilt Tatch, & BH, BX1500
You said that by saying the pinion would continue to turn with infinite traction and a resisting load at ground level. Applied at ground level the unmoved resisting load exactly offsets pinion torque while it is holding back the tractor motion. So how can the pinion keep turning?What youre saying is that the pinion can overide a torque generated by its own action, that is equal and opposite to the direction of its action. Why do you say that?The above statement is yours. I never said anything resembling that.There's two contentions I claim.First. No tire slippage. No powertrain failure along with enough power to keep turning. No movement of the load attached. Power applied to move the tractor forward. The tractor will become light in the front and without any mechanical interference (wheelie bars, hitch rammed in the ground, etc.) will in fact tip over backward.Second is a question CalG and yourself have avoided. With forward movement where is the load on the pinion bearing closest to the pinon gear, Top, Left Side, Right Side, Bottom?? And to save going back and forth half a dozen posts, explain why you chose whichever you choose.Please forgive my crunched paragraph, for some reason my computer won't separate.
I did answer your questions ... but not the reasons. The directions are the resultant of forces to drive the ring forward.