CDN Farm Boy
Veteran Member
Specifications beyond the eyes are only meaningful if the geometry is specified with the spec. and it usually isn't. You can modify this geometry and achieve a perfect parallelogram. If you do this the lift at the eyes will equal the lift at any point beyond the eyes until the front lifts or something breaks. I suggest you add more control for geometry in your request above. For example, the weight a given tractor can lift will change depending on which 3pt fork is used due to differing distances between the bottom pins and the top link.
Ya, we got that. 14 pages debating the merits of a PERFECT parallelogram. None of our tractors are perfect and pretty sure none of us are going to cut them up to make it one so what's the point of suggesting it?
I'm pretty sure Sodo's request was a very basic "can your tractor lift what it is claimed to be able to lift?" And I'm pretty sure he was asking in a practical sense, not a theoretically perfect paralellogram. Yes, there are some variables that can made as complicated as you like but if you don't care about absolute precision in the calculations, only the basic of application, can some of the variables be ignored and still have 'reasonably' accurate information? Most of you are trying to take the manufacture's spec and work out from that. Try working the other way around from the maximum weight able to be lifted to see if the manufacture's spec is accurate. Since we are talking max capacity, I'd suggest setting up the links in the holes providing greatest lift capacity and at the fork end, use vertical spacing according to the SAE spec.