4570Man
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2015
- Messages
- 18,484
- Location
- Crossville, TN
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, Kubota L3800, Grasshopper 428D, Topkick dump truck, 3500 dump truck, 10 ton trailer, more lighter trailers.
You still don’t understand. What is supplying this mythical pressure you keep talking about? You apply 2000 pounds of actual pounds not pressure to your grapple lid. The grapple lid and cylinder works at a 3/1 mechanical disadvantage so you’re pushing 6,000 pounds of force against the cylinder. The cylinder rod area is 2 inches. 6000 pounds over 2 inches is 3,000 psi generated. If you increase the cylinder area without changing anything else the load is distributed over more area and the psi is less. Again how would tracks or snow shoes work if they’re still applying the same psi? You could push a pencil in the ground pretty easy by hand. Try again with a 2x4 and see how it goes. Your hand pressure of say 50 pounds is a lot over the small area of the 1/4 diameter pencil. 50 pounds over the much larger 2x4 isn’t very much.So I now get the confusion, you folks do not understand that the measurement force discussed and referenced is psi = pounds per square inch. It matters not if the psi is applied to 10 square inches or 100 square inches. It is still measured and expressed in psi, just like the pressure gauge shows. That equalizes size. Difficult concept when you refuse to acknowledge the unit! PSI is a fairly standard measurement in pressure! And again size foes not change psi nor does volume!
Just wow!