IF the tractor has enough power to go past the equillibrium point I illustrated, AND the tires move backwards as you suggest, How exactally do they move backwards????
Are they slidding? (loss of traction) which whould result in the front comming down.
Or are they rolling backwards? IF so, How? with the clutch engaged, arent you trying to drive them forward? How do they go backwards? Lack of power?Clutch slippage?
Once you pass the equillibrium point, the forces trying to set the front down are een greater. Just the shear weight of the front in the air, plus the chain pulling on the drawbar.
The tractor DOES rotate around the axle, up to the equillibrium point. Because up to that point, the tractor is NOT moving backwards. If you care, do your little drawing again, with the chain and drawbar in a straight line (what I am calling equillibrium) and WITHOUT the rear tire moving backwards, and see where the point of rotation is???
Using the rear axle as a pivot, the whole tractor becomes like a lever. with the front wheels in the air, a rearward pulling force on the drawbar is going to try to set them back down.
Your mistake is suggesting that this component will somehow outweigh all the other component forces in action during the pull and prevent the front of the tractor lifting. It just won't, unless the overall load vector points below the contact patch of the tires as I've described already. This fact is true no matter the exact length or height of the drawbar or the connection details of how and where it mounts to the frame of the tractor.
xtn
All the bla, bla, hook up point, length of chain. on & on. None of this BS matters.
Simple fact. if there is enough horse power & traction, a tractor cam or will go over back wards.
But do you know of any stock tractors that meet those two criteria?
You weren't asking me, but I would like to answer that question for myself just so we're all clear...
I don't know one way or the other. I've never said a tractor will flip. I've only said what I think are the conditions that will prevent it from happening, defended my thoughts, and debated conflicting information when I could.
xtn
PS - I also want to say that I hope nobody finds my arguing to be rude. It's simply interesting debate as far as I'm concerned. I hope some may find me to be consistent, clear, intelligent, and able to back up my points. Am I always right? No, of course not. But I am always stubborn!![]()
Although I think we'll have to agree to disagree...what other components are you discussing? Traction? Weight? Pulling speed? Others?
Yup I believe tires are likely to slip first too. That satisfies my condition #2, lack of traction. That's real world, isn't it? You said you believe the tires would slip first, then accuse my conditions, which include that possibility, of being more theoretical than real world? I don't get the logic there. You say you think the tractor won't flip because the tire will slip first in the real world. I said the tractor can flip unless - among other limits - there isn't enough traction. So we've said the same thing but you're real world and I'm not?Although I don't think any of these would overcome the forces I described in my previous post, my assumptions were (for sake of discussion) a straight pull on level ground. I can't make any assumptions about traction since soil conditions vary too much and I don't know enough about tractor tire traction on any given soil type. But I do believe the tires would slip first.
(EDIT: Reading your response to LD1, you assume the tires don't slip. That would likely be an erroneous assumption. And, your comment about "The only things that prevent the flip are lack of power, lack of traction, or the resisting load vector pointing below the contact patch of the tires" describes a theoretical situation more so then real world scenarios.]