Soundguy
Old Timer
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2002
- Messages
- 51,575
- Location
- Central florida
- Tractor
- RK 55HC,ym1700, NH7610S, Ford 8N, 2N, NAA, 660, 850 x2, 541, 950, 941D, 951, 2000, 3000, 4000, 4600, 5000, 740, IH 'C' 'H', CUB, John Deere 'B', allis 'G', case VAC
First.. I'd like to know where people are getting the idea that there is a line drawn in the sand.. and that 2wd tractors are handicapped , useless, unsafe, slow, ineficient. Every job has criteria. As I have said many times.. get a tractor that meets the criteria to match your job. If you can't.. you have to compromise. For instance.. int he case of the person that can only afford 1 tractor.. and needs large tasks and small tasks.. the 4wd my not be an option due to price.. thus you compromise. the weights are a good compromise.. in some cases.. in others.. not.
I didn't make the comment about backing up the hill.. that was someone else's message.
It's not my fault that 600# adds 50% more weight to your tractor.. sounds like you may have too small a tractor for that task that made the front end light... the advise is not wrongbecause your tractor is small.. it just doesn't apply to your situation. Same with us 2wd tractor owners... I'll bet alot of us have flat land.. I know I do..
Lots of land got worked with 2x4 and 2x3 tractors before 4wd made it to mainstream farming. The farmers made due.. when better stuff came along.. the ones that wanted it, needed it, and could aford it.. got it. The ones that didn't need it.. didn't get it.. and the ones that couldn't afford it.. made due.. or compromised. I'm not advocating any different.
As I said before.. if ya need 4wd, and got 4wd.. use it... ( but quit griping at us 2wd users that don't need it... ) I own pancake flat land... I can't justify spending money on 4x4 tractors to mow with... As for safety.. that's an individual issue. I don't think I've seen anyone here advocate being intentionally unsafe.
You guys need to understand there is not a black/white line in the sand between the 2 issues.. rather.. there is a large grey area with many answers and options between the two... that's what I.. and many others have been trying to say... nothing more.. nothing less..
Soundguy
I didn't make the comment about backing up the hill.. that was someone else's message.
It's not my fault that 600# adds 50% more weight to your tractor.. sounds like you may have too small a tractor for that task that made the front end light... the advise is not wrongbecause your tractor is small.. it just doesn't apply to your situation. Same with us 2wd tractor owners... I'll bet alot of us have flat land.. I know I do..
Lots of land got worked with 2x4 and 2x3 tractors before 4wd made it to mainstream farming. The farmers made due.. when better stuff came along.. the ones that wanted it, needed it, and could aford it.. got it. The ones that didn't need it.. didn't get it.. and the ones that couldn't afford it.. made due.. or compromised. I'm not advocating any different.
As I said before.. if ya need 4wd, and got 4wd.. use it... ( but quit griping at us 2wd users that don't need it... ) I own pancake flat land... I can't justify spending money on 4x4 tractors to mow with... As for safety.. that's an individual issue. I don't think I've seen anyone here advocate being intentionally unsafe.
You guys need to understand there is not a black/white line in the sand between the 2 issues.. rather.. there is a large grey area with many answers and options between the two... that's what I.. and many others have been trying to say... nothing more.. nothing less..
Soundguy
whodat90 said:Yes, I understand the procedure. I also understand that what you're saying is basically that if you handicap yourself by restricting yourself to only using the safest and slowest procedures you're going to be fine. The fact is that with 4wd you don't have to restrict yourself to exclusively backing down hills. It's called progress. Once farmers used mules, and they worked just fine. Then there were tractors, and farmers learned how to use them. Now we have 4wd tractors.
In a perfect world we'd all have 5 or 6 tractors, each that work for a particular weight and job. In the real world, at least here on this board, most of us have one tractor that's too big for some stuff and too small for other stuff, and we make it work. If you can handicap yourself by using only 2wd and still get your work done, good on ya. If you want to take every advantage offered by the tractor and greatly increase your safety margin, get a 4wd. You will never, however, convince me that using a mule or a 2wd tractor by simply following special procedures will ever be as fast, efficient, or safe as doing the same things in a modern 4wd tractor.
As far as putting more weight on the tractor, sounds good but I don't want to. If I put your 600lb weight on the front of my tractor, it would weigh half again more than it does now. Weight also reaches a point of diminishing returns for marginal gains. I have room for one more suitcase weight, and that's it. Adding more exceeds the design specs. For an occasional lightening of the front wheels with one implement, it's not worth the monetary, procedural or equipment stress penalty.