OK, assuming gearing appropriate to get the tires to spin.
Once they are spinning the point is that the RPM's can be kept up in the engines torque sweet spot.
So, imagine two machines, both with the same weight and the same tires. One is spinning the tires about 3x faster than the other. Which one is pulling harder?
On the other hand, if both machines have enough traction to keep the tires stuck, the diesel tractor will win because it can make more torque at the near-zero RPM while the truck's gas engine will not be able to remain on a high point of its torque curve. Maybe the truck driver can burn enough clutch to compensate?
- Rick
Once they are spinning the point is that the RPM's can be kept up in the engines torque sweet spot.
So, imagine two machines, both with the same weight and the same tires. One is spinning the tires about 3x faster than the other. Which one is pulling harder?
On the other hand, if both machines have enough traction to keep the tires stuck, the diesel tractor will win because it can make more torque at the near-zero RPM while the truck's gas engine will not be able to remain on a high point of its torque curve. Maybe the truck driver can burn enough clutch to compensate?
- Rick