BillyP said:I'd be willing to bet you two of my previous post against a hole in a donut it's a misprint![]()
N80 said:My Kubota manual calls it 4wd. There is a sticker on the fender from the factory that says "4WD".
My Ford pickup has a "4WD" sticker on it from the factory.
We all know how the systems work, but if you have a problem with what Kubota _calls_ its system, you'll have to give Mr. Kubota a call and set him straight.
Besides, can you hear one of us, talking to our buds or farmer friends, saying "Well , ah, technically speaking your tractor is not a 4 wheel drive, it is a 3 wheel drive, when the rear diff is locked, of course, and really just a two wheel drive when it isn't....technically speaking of course." Do that and you're likely to get a pocket protector for Christmas and season one of Erkle on video tape.
Dargo said:I've operated several tractors that had a locking front differential as well as the standard locking rear differential. They would have to be considered 4wd. They pull really well that way, but sure won't turn worth a darn!![]()
ovrszd said:Hmmmm, so are you saying your L4400 will always spin all 4 wheels when the MFWD is engaged??? Hmmmmm.
ovrszd said:And to N80, all the farmers around my area know that and would have a good time with anyone that claimed because their manual says 4WD, their tractor is 4WD.![]()
N80 said:Really? So lets say you stop by your farmer friend's barn and he tells you he's waiting on delivery of a new Ag tractor. You ask him which one and he says its a new Kubota.
You're interested of course and would like to know if it has a front driveline. Do you ask:
A) Is it a four wheel drive?
b) Is it a three wheel drive when you use the diff lock?
c) Is it a mechanical front wheel drive?
Around here, you'd simply say "It's a four wheel drive" and everyone would know _exactly_ what you were talking about regardless of who made the tractor.
If you told them it was a three wheel drive they'd either think you were being a smart *****, joking or just a dweeb.
If you told them it was "mechanical front wheel drive" they'd simply think you were being overly precise and/or a dweeb.
If it is really that different in Missouri is must be a pleasure to be surrounded by such technically and semantically precise farmers. But we grow them a little different down here.
N80 said:Really? So lets say you stop by your farmer friend's barn and he tells you he's waiting on delivery of a new Ag tractor. You ask him which one and he says its a new Kubota.
You're interested of course and would like to know if it has a front driveline. Do you ask:
A) Is it a four wheel drive?
b) Is it a three wheel drive when you use the diff lock?
c) Is it a mechanical front wheel drive?
Around here, you'd simply say "It's a four wheel drive" and everyone would know _exactly_ what you were talking about regardless of who made the tractor.
If you told them it was a three wheel drive they'd either think you were being a smart *****, joking or just a dweeb.
If you told them it was "mechanical front wheel drive" they'd simply think you were being overly precise and/or a dweeb.
If it is really that different in Missouri is must be a pleasure to be surrounded by such technically and semantically precise farmers. But we grow them a little different down here.
Soundguy said:Do we really have to beat every last word out of this 'semantics' topic?
I thinks it's pretty safe to say that '4wd' is a -generic- term, and MFWD is a specific manufacturers term, and the the 3wd issue is a technical aspect of the functioning of the most common '4wd' systems.
I don't think anyone here is debating those facts... right?
Soundguy