foreman Etexas
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2011
- Messages
- 3,273
- Location
- texas
- Tractor
- Kubota (2010)M7040,(2012)M7040,New Holland(2004)TL100
Mine is a 74" it covers tracks,I will measure outside width of tires today.
I like my rear counterbalance weight to be at the rear tires.
I would think You can get away with it more than most, because of the shear size of your tractor.
I'm was planning on putting fluid in the rear tires but haven't decided what type of ant-freeze to use. After yesterday's weigh-in I know I'm going to fill rear tires. I will load them myself as I see no reason to pay someone to supervise what I've done several times in the past. I leaning toward windshield wiper fluid or bio-deg antifreeze.
We will agree to disagree then.
I would think You can get away with it more than most, because of the shear size of your tractor.
Just so you know, the tire ballast wont effect your front axle weights. Only weight BEHIND the tires will. So if you had loaded tires, the results of front axle weight would have been identical.
May I ask where you are getting you facts to prove that "rear wheel weighting" won't have a very similar affect as weight on the 3 pt in lessening load on frt axle? Granted the further behind the rear axle the more the weight will affect the weight transfer. When weighing ft axle the frt tires(axle) is the fulcrum point not the rear tires(axle).
Jim, the rear tires are sitting on the ground. No amount of extra weight in the tires is going to change the weight on the front axle. But it will add more weight to the front axle if enough weight is added to the loader.May I ask where you are getting you facts to prove that "rear wheel weighting" won't have a very similar affect as weight on the 3 pt in lessening load on frt axle? Granted the further behind the rear axle the more the weight will affect the weight transfer. When weighing ft axle the frt tires(axle) is the fulcrum point not the rear tires(axle).
Yes Richard, using a loader with no ballast on the 3 pt is causing more wear on the front axle components.If my methods are causing unnecessary wear, it isn't any worse or better dependent on tractor size. That's the point I was making when referencing different sized tractors having different sized loaders with different lift capacities. They are all matched to fit the tractor's ability to handle it.
When you max out the lifting capacity of the loader on your L3750 or L3800 you are getting just as close to the maximum weight carrying capacity of your tractors as I am of mine.
Rear counterbalance weight should be used to maximize safety if needed at all. When used caution should be taken in regards to making the front axle dangerously light when going up a steep grade with nothing in the loader bucket.
We don't want the fulcrum point to be the front axle, we want it to be the back axle. Compare the size of the two axles and the wheels tires. Also the front tire have to steer...