</font><font color="blue" class="small">( 2. The flip side of this is I think Kioti's are underpowered across the board thus my fears and subconsciously (until now) the reason I have asked all the questions that I have about engine speeds and longevity in this thread and in others. I made a conscious decision that the engine size was something I could live with and just take smaller bites as long as the frame and everything else was built for durability. Obviously this was not a big enough factor for me to over ride item #1 thus my choice in tractors.)</font>
Why do you believe that Kiotis are underpowered? Does their 20hp model only have 10hp? Please explain.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Maybe I've come full circle and am coming to terms with my decision, but I wish they would design them so that in standard work the engines were only pulling 60% or so of rated capacity. I don't like the fact that the engines need to be running near full tilt to do what they were designed to do. Power reserve should be designed in.
NO tractor had a model that met that wish for me. This goes right back to that new fangled way of thinking... todays designs not just for beef.. but for power, seem to be to design something so that it performs its intended role right on the point of failure (almost overloaded structural design, or almost underpowered powerplant). That whole way of thinking eludes me. Design something so that it is working at 50% of capacity during its normal duty cycle and it will last FAR more than twice as long. )</font>
It seems to me that if you want a tractor that, during standard work, only pulls at 60% of peak power you should buy a tractor with 40% more power than you need. Or use implements that are a size or two smaller (too much math for me to figure out what 40% smaller implements would be) than what is recommended for the horsepower of your tractor.
I don't think that today things are designed to run at the max potential of the device, especially not at overload. If they were, then you would not be able to spend a few dollars and get a performance boost (e.g., new chip for a computer controlled vehicle) and still have a long lasting engine.
I think the issue may not be to lug or not to lug, but to buy bigger or not to buy bigger.
Clint.
Why do you believe that Kiotis are underpowered? Does their 20hp model only have 10hp? Please explain.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Maybe I've come full circle and am coming to terms with my decision, but I wish they would design them so that in standard work the engines were only pulling 60% or so of rated capacity. I don't like the fact that the engines need to be running near full tilt to do what they were designed to do. Power reserve should be designed in.
NO tractor had a model that met that wish for me. This goes right back to that new fangled way of thinking... todays designs not just for beef.. but for power, seem to be to design something so that it performs its intended role right on the point of failure (almost overloaded structural design, or almost underpowered powerplant). That whole way of thinking eludes me. Design something so that it is working at 50% of capacity during its normal duty cycle and it will last FAR more than twice as long. )</font>
It seems to me that if you want a tractor that, during standard work, only pulls at 60% of peak power you should buy a tractor with 40% more power than you need. Or use implements that are a size or two smaller (too much math for me to figure out what 40% smaller implements would be) than what is recommended for the horsepower of your tractor.
I don't think that today things are designed to run at the max potential of the device, especially not at overload. If they were, then you would not be able to spend a few dollars and get a performance boost (e.g., new chip for a computer controlled vehicle) and still have a long lasting engine.
I think the issue may not be to lug or not to lug, but to buy bigger or not to buy bigger.
Clint.