RalphVa
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2003
- Messages
- 7,885
- Location
- Charlottesville, VA, USA
- Tractor
- JD 2025R, previously Gravely 5650 & JD 4010 & JD 1025R
I agree. Have a self-propelled push Ryobi 40v that is fully as powerful as the Honda we just sold. Got an electric Ryobi ZT as well. Don't think it is quite as powerful as a gas machine, but close.Let me know if this is the wrong place to put this, but IMHO, the advantages of electric powered tractors in the smaller sizes (under, say, 100hp) will be so massive that even though cars are ahead in the development, new small electric tractors will begin taking over the market somewhere around 2025, and by 2030, they will have made diesels in the under 60 hp class obsolete, for the following reasons:
1. Diesel engines and the various transmissions are extremely expensive to design and produce compared to electric drive trains.
2. The limitation on continuous use of electric tractors - probably 4 hours or so at a clip before requiring recharge, on the lower priced machines won't be a problem to most small tractor owners. For those for whom it is a problem, more batteries can be put in the tractor.
3. No more lugging and pouring cans of diesel is not a nothing-burger.
4. The problem of battery weight in cars is an advantage in most tractors, as it can increase both traction and stability if properly situated.
5. Lower maintenance costs and full control of speed without many gallons of hydro oil for locomotion.
6. In tractors with loaders, portable supplemental battery packs could potentially charged while the tractor is working, and added to the loader when using PTO implements, or carried on the 3pt. when doing loader work.
7. CUTs are not really screamingly noisy but the electric tractors' quiet will be appreciated.
8. Prices will be competitive with diesels by 2025 and will be significantly less expensive than diesels by 2030.
9. An electric tractor charged from home solar or wind will appeal to the "independent" types, like most of us here.
10. If made properly, repairs to an Electric Tractor should be much easier and require much less technical knowledge than compact diesels.
Disclaimer: I am invested in electric vehicles, electric tractors and solar panel makers.
Neither of the Ryobis have belts, just motors for the wheels and motors for each blade. That's one appeal to a tractor, e.g. no need for HST nor shafts to get power to the front wheels as well. Each wheel will likely have its own brushless motor. There will be no PTOs. Each implement will have its own motor. Just connect the battery power line. May see some hybrids, some with PTOs to enable use of older implements. Just need a separate motor on the PTO.
It's astonishing what power brushless gives you. Have a Ryobi 40v grass whip that is as powerful as a 2 cycle engine; whereas, a Kobalt 40v brushed one just sold was not near as powerful.
Anywhere from 2 to 4 hours operation would be fine with me.
Diesels would be reserved for all day power and would likely be turbo. Turbo and electric likely have about the same efficiency, but electric gets far simpler. Could have an electric top link, for instance. Electric motors to move chutes around, etc.