That is news to me....but I have never quite understood why anyone actually needs brakes for anything but parking on a slope when you have a HST tractor...let off on the hydro pedal and the tractor basically stops dead. I have NEVER used the rear brakes of my 4410 for any slowing down or stopping purpose. EVER. Parking on a slope...yes.
Here is an interesting and exciting phenomenon. If you go down a slippery hill traveling forwards for instance grass or gravel, and you have a load in your bucket, and depending on how heavily ballasted your tractor is in the rear, you will lose traction with the road surface with your rear tires. If you are in 4wd this will not occur because the surface tire patch contact area of the front tires will add to the total compression braking.
As you go down the hill forwards the normal weight shift occurs placing more weight on the front axle, and reducing weight on the front axle. This occurs any time you go down a hill forwards. Now if you have a load in the bucket, this load acts as a lever placing more weight on the front axle and less weight on the rear axle. The contact patch of the rear tires with the slippery road surface just gets lighter and less surface area.
The hydrostatic transmission acts as a brake if you start to let off of the forward pedal as you mention above.
So as you start down the hill under the conditions I have outlined, the rear tires lires lose their contact patch with the slippery road (gravel or grass or anything less than a rough high traction surface) and since the front tires in 2WD have no connection with the driveline, they cannot add to the braking action even though there is even more weight on them at this time, but they are freewheeling.
The end result is you "take a ride" of an out of control tractor sliding the rear tires and picking up speed as you fly down the hill, usually with one rear tire rotating backwards and with a total loss of speed control. It is now time to "throw out the anchor." If you have rear implement that will grab the road, lower it and lower the bucket to act as a friction brake to slow you down. Depending on what is at the bottom of the hill, you can either ride it out or go over the cliff or hit the tree or what ever is in your path, because the foot operated brakes nor the braking action of the hydrostat is going to save you.
If you haven't had this happen to you yet, That is a good thing. But if your slopes are steep enough, and slippery enough and your FEL is loaded, and your 3pt is a little light, AND your are in 2WD. IT WILL HAPPEN. And you will be on here telling us all about it.
What often happens is the operator will have the need to avoid some obstacle at the bottom of the hill and will turn the steering wheel, and that is when the tractor overturns. Or they hit the tree, or they go over an embankment.
Moral of the story, when descending hills, stay in 4WD (FWA), or descend the hill, rear wheels first (backward) if using a 2WD machine. Good luck, stay safe and happy tractoring.
