Chris, thanks for your confidence in my ability to explain the New Holland HST on the TC45DA and other class III Boomers. As you stated, it works very well and is in no way a "gimmick."
Z-Michigan, you are exactly right about the transmission ranges. The ranges are nothing more than a two or three-speed geared transmission. The input to that geared transmission is the HST transmission. What NH has done with the dual power is to give you a way of changing gears that is easy as pressing a button and can be done on-the-fly. I don't know of any other CUTs that can change gears without coming to a complete stop.
The HST transmission is nothing more than a pump and a motor. The more fluid the pump provides, the faster the motor turns. When you press on the HST pedal, you change the amount of fluid going to the motor. This is done by a variable component inside the pump. It's called a swashplate. When you change the swashplate's angle, the pump's output changes.
The other side of the HST is the motor. In most HSTs, that motor just responds to the input fluid. What NH decided to do was to make a two-speed hydraulic motor. The motor has a swashplate just like the pump, but it is a driven swashplate instead of a pump swashplate. When you press the rabbit-turtle switch, the angle of the motor's swashplate changes and provides two speeds as input to that two-speed geared transmission, effectively four speeds are now available.
For some additional detail, the motor's actual change is either to put it's swashplate at 15º or 9º. This is accomplished with hydraulic fluid pressure. When you press the button, it sends a signal to a solenoid that opens a valve, allowing pressure to change the motor's swashplate.
If there is an electrical failure, the transmission switches to the turtle mode. You would have only two ranges, but you will not be disabled. I've had a wire come off and I can attest to this happening. It will not disable the tractor, only limit the number of gears. I would recommend that anyone with a dual-power HST tranmission become familiar with where the solenoid valve is. It's easy to find under the left side of the operator's platform. The connector can get snagged by brush and pulled loose. In 1200 hours, it has happened to me once. I just stopped, plugged the wire back in, and was on my way in a matter of a few seconds. Reconizing the symptoms took longer than the fix.
I don't think you can call this a gimmick. It's a great feature and I would venture to say that all those who have it love it. It raises my productivity up a notch. I don't think I could easily adjust to another tractor without it.
