kevinwak
Platinum Member
While I have not personaly driven a MWFD tractor, I have had tons of experience with 2wd tractors.
On our farm we have a Case 4890 which is a true 4wd with 4 wheel steer. It is mainly used for tillage. Other then that we have a fleet of 2wd tractors and they can do tremendous amounts of work and have huge traction. The only things I can see the MFWD being a benefit in would be a loader tractor, on hills, or in mud or something where you just need tires in a different spot that can pull you through.
One of our 2wd tractors is a case 1570 with loaded dual tires. This tractor has pulled a 50' hoe seed drill with no traction issues seeding 1000+ acres yearly for the past 20 years. It is also used to pull a 90' harrow packer and a 130' sprayer. On the occasion where the 4wd tractor breaks down this has also pulled a 50' vibrashank cultivator or a 40' deeptillage cultivator with no issues. It just isn't as good on fuel as the 4wd with the cultivators, so that is why it isnt used more regularily for that.
Farm tractors have huge traction, even the 2wd ones. I have pulled out a stuck 4wd pickup truck, that another 4wd pickup couldnt pull out, with a 40 horse power Case 400 2wd tractor.
But then again we have no hills, our fields are dry during spraying season and we, as with most of the farms around here, have a wheel loader (gravel loader) to do our loader work.
On our farm we have a Case 4890 which is a true 4wd with 4 wheel steer. It is mainly used for tillage. Other then that we have a fleet of 2wd tractors and they can do tremendous amounts of work and have huge traction. The only things I can see the MFWD being a benefit in would be a loader tractor, on hills, or in mud or something where you just need tires in a different spot that can pull you through.
One of our 2wd tractors is a case 1570 with loaded dual tires. This tractor has pulled a 50' hoe seed drill with no traction issues seeding 1000+ acres yearly for the past 20 years. It is also used to pull a 90' harrow packer and a 130' sprayer. On the occasion where the 4wd tractor breaks down this has also pulled a 50' vibrashank cultivator or a 40' deeptillage cultivator with no issues. It just isn't as good on fuel as the 4wd with the cultivators, so that is why it isnt used more regularily for that.
Farm tractors have huge traction, even the 2wd ones. I have pulled out a stuck 4wd pickup truck, that another 4wd pickup couldnt pull out, with a 40 horse power Case 400 2wd tractor.
But then again we have no hills, our fields are dry during spraying season and we, as with most of the farms around here, have a wheel loader (gravel loader) to do our loader work.