Bob_Skurka
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2003
- Messages
- 7,615
albmn10 wrote: <font color="blue">( Woods 1012 is 3040 lbs, the kuboata 723 breakout is 2605lbs. )</font>
Neil wrote: <font color="red">
The Woods is 3040 at the pivot pins! Its 2240 at 20" out, that where Kubota takes their measurements. The 723 is sitll 400lbs stronger on breakout. </font>
Seems to me that there have been DOZENS of conversations on trying to compare loader specs and I've been flamed many times for suggesting that it is critical to know what the heck you are reading!!!
What seems totally silly are the people who defend ASAE specs as justification for using numbers that are meaningless. All the specs are ASAE specs, the question always has to go back to EXACTLY WHICH ASAE spes are you trying to compare? And is there any real world application that can be applied to those numbers . . . or are those numbers used because they are confusing and mislead consumers into thinking the loader is stronger than it really is?
Neil wrote: <font color="red">
Whenever you look at these numbers you have to look where the measurement is taken. That can skew the numbers a good 30%. Kubota uses honest figures - breakout at the pivot pin is a useless number and has no real world application... it just looks good on paper. This has been hashed over before, but if your looking at anything other other than a Kubota or a New Holland you need to be very careful what your looking at. These marketing hype figures only lead people to be confused and expect more from the product than they are really going to get. </font>
That is exactly my point. It is nice to see an educated dealer point this out. The sad thing is that I've asked some dealers about specs (loaders and 3pt) and been able to stump several of them. I use it as a test. If they pass, then I may do business with them. If they don't, then I sit there and keep asking questions and coming up with answers until they realize they are idiots. But they are educated when I leave, and probably angry too /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif
Albmn10 wrote: <font color="blue"> their specs are rated at 2250 psi. But the Kioti Ck30 puts out 2560 psi . . .the Woods has the low end power </font>
Neil wrote: <font color="red"> There is a relief setting on the loader valve that only allows 2250 down the lines. The extra pressure does not really get you anything. Some machines are less than 2250, their real world performance will actually be less. </font>
Neil, just to be crystal clear, the loader valve pressure setting is the limiting factor on the capacity. If the tractor has a higher output than the relief settings on the loader, then the extra capacity is useless because the loader will not allow the higher pressures. So really the Woods has LESS of the "low end power" which I presume means 'breakout force' and it also has LESS lift capacity too.
The Woods loader simply is no match for the Kubota 723.
And from the standpoint of the CK30, the Woods loader is still going to block the view forward and ruin the loader efficiency that the curved arm loader provides. Does anyone know if the new curved arm Rhino loaders will fit the CK30? Maybe that would be a viable option? Of course that is new/unproven design, but still might be worth a look if jmunekata doesn't mind taking a gamble.
Neil wrote: <font color="red">
The Woods is 3040 at the pivot pins! Its 2240 at 20" out, that where Kubota takes their measurements. The 723 is sitll 400lbs stronger on breakout. </font>
Seems to me that there have been DOZENS of conversations on trying to compare loader specs and I've been flamed many times for suggesting that it is critical to know what the heck you are reading!!!
What seems totally silly are the people who defend ASAE specs as justification for using numbers that are meaningless. All the specs are ASAE specs, the question always has to go back to EXACTLY WHICH ASAE spes are you trying to compare? And is there any real world application that can be applied to those numbers . . . or are those numbers used because they are confusing and mislead consumers into thinking the loader is stronger than it really is?
Neil wrote: <font color="red">
Whenever you look at these numbers you have to look where the measurement is taken. That can skew the numbers a good 30%. Kubota uses honest figures - breakout at the pivot pin is a useless number and has no real world application... it just looks good on paper. This has been hashed over before, but if your looking at anything other other than a Kubota or a New Holland you need to be very careful what your looking at. These marketing hype figures only lead people to be confused and expect more from the product than they are really going to get. </font>
That is exactly my point. It is nice to see an educated dealer point this out. The sad thing is that I've asked some dealers about specs (loaders and 3pt) and been able to stump several of them. I use it as a test. If they pass, then I may do business with them. If they don't, then I sit there and keep asking questions and coming up with answers until they realize they are idiots. But they are educated when I leave, and probably angry too /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif
Albmn10 wrote: <font color="blue"> their specs are rated at 2250 psi. But the Kioti Ck30 puts out 2560 psi . . .the Woods has the low end power </font>
Neil wrote: <font color="red"> There is a relief setting on the loader valve that only allows 2250 down the lines. The extra pressure does not really get you anything. Some machines are less than 2250, their real world performance will actually be less. </font>
Neil, just to be crystal clear, the loader valve pressure setting is the limiting factor on the capacity. If the tractor has a higher output than the relief settings on the loader, then the extra capacity is useless because the loader will not allow the higher pressures. So really the Woods has LESS of the "low end power" which I presume means 'breakout force' and it also has LESS lift capacity too.
The Woods loader simply is no match for the Kubota 723.
And from the standpoint of the CK30, the Woods loader is still going to block the view forward and ruin the loader efficiency that the curved arm loader provides. Does anyone know if the new curved arm Rhino loaders will fit the CK30? Maybe that would be a viable option? Of course that is new/unproven design, but still might be worth a look if jmunekata doesn't mind taking a gamble.