ShookFarm
Bronze Member
We purchased my wife's family farm from her grandmother in February. I also just purchased a JD5103 from my local John Deere dealer last week and I am having it delivered tomorrow (Friday, August 11, 2006). This will be used to "hog" 27 acres of pasture and food plots for deer and turkey that will be created at a later date (I've gotta find a disk and meet with the Conservation Forester!)
After finding the web site just this week, I've been reading posts everyhwere. I am so excited to find all kinds of answers to things that puzzled me. But, I have more questions. My questions evolve around the fact that I am really new to tractor ownership. I've driven small tractors on an uncle's farm when I was younger and the last tractor I drove was an International 1066 at another uncle's farm.
Our farm is 103 acres with about 27 acres of pasture bordered by a creek. After reading the manual, I see that I need to run about 2400 RPM's on the motor to keep a 540 RPM operating speed on the PTO. It appears I should be mowing in A range any one of the gears (1, 2 or 3). Is that correct?
The Nebraska Tractor Test document lists horsepower ratings and fuel consumption which leaves me a little confused. How do they get such low horsepower output with engine RPM still so high?
The rotary cutter is a 6' King Kutter, however, it only has a 40HP gearbox. How can I keep from overpowering the gearbox and how can I conserve fuel? If the engine is runing at 2400 RPM's to keep the PTO up to speed, I really can't back off too much on the throttle without reducing the PTO speed.
Help me understand the proper operation here. I don't want to damage anything and I want to be safe. For S/N's below 1798, I see that the PTO horsepower was 38 (per the owner's manual), but now it's 42. I based my cutter purchase off the 38 number I had found on the internet so I thought I'd be safe. I may have a little more power than I need, but isn't it better to be overpowered than under?
After finding the web site just this week, I've been reading posts everyhwere. I am so excited to find all kinds of answers to things that puzzled me. But, I have more questions. My questions evolve around the fact that I am really new to tractor ownership. I've driven small tractors on an uncle's farm when I was younger and the last tractor I drove was an International 1066 at another uncle's farm.
Our farm is 103 acres with about 27 acres of pasture bordered by a creek. After reading the manual, I see that I need to run about 2400 RPM's on the motor to keep a 540 RPM operating speed on the PTO. It appears I should be mowing in A range any one of the gears (1, 2 or 3). Is that correct?
The Nebraska Tractor Test document lists horsepower ratings and fuel consumption which leaves me a little confused. How do they get such low horsepower output with engine RPM still so high?
The rotary cutter is a 6' King Kutter, however, it only has a 40HP gearbox. How can I keep from overpowering the gearbox and how can I conserve fuel? If the engine is runing at 2400 RPM's to keep the PTO up to speed, I really can't back off too much on the throttle without reducing the PTO speed.
Help me understand the proper operation here. I don't want to damage anything and I want to be safe. For S/N's below 1798, I see that the PTO horsepower was 38 (per the owner's manual), but now it's 42. I based my cutter purchase off the 38 number I had found on the internet so I thought I'd be safe. I may have a little more power than I need, but isn't it better to be overpowered than under?
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