gladehound
Veteran Member
Thank you for those examples GMan. I was not aware of those. Learn something new every day.
In all three of your examples, it looks to be boom break out force because the forces are substantially less than the rollback force. For Deere, it even specifies that it is boom breakout force. For the others the math indicates that breakout is being use to designate the boom force at ground level. That could be confirmed by measuring the difference in the boom arm pin to bucket pin and dividing by the distance from the boom arm pin to the end of the bucket (or point forward of the pins that is specified). This difference in distance should be the same as the difference in breakout force at the pin and the point forward of the pin if it is indeed boom breakout force.
Do you know of any examples for CUTs where breakout refers to anything other than lift force of the boom at ground level? It would be nice to establish for TBN what breakout really is for CUTs - there seems to be a lot of confusion.
So far, everything I've seen including the new information provided by Gman indicates that it is ground level boom lift force. Manufacturers who want to show a spec for the curl cylinders are calling that force the "roll back" force.
In all three of your examples, it looks to be boom break out force because the forces are substantially less than the rollback force. For Deere, it even specifies that it is boom breakout force. For the others the math indicates that breakout is being use to designate the boom force at ground level. That could be confirmed by measuring the difference in the boom arm pin to bucket pin and dividing by the distance from the boom arm pin to the end of the bucket (or point forward of the pins that is specified). This difference in distance should be the same as the difference in breakout force at the pin and the point forward of the pin if it is indeed boom breakout force.
Do you know of any examples for CUTs where breakout refers to anything other than lift force of the boom at ground level? It would be nice to establish for TBN what breakout really is for CUTs - there seems to be a lot of confusion.
So far, everything I've seen including the new information provided by Gman indicates that it is ground level boom lift force. Manufacturers who want to show a spec for the curl cylinders are calling that force the "roll back" force.