Preventing tractor back flip

   / Preventing tractor back flip #281  
Here is a article that I stole from another thread on TBN that talks about flipping from a load.
It may help or muddle but here it is. Near the end is when it talks about what happens when pulling on an immovable object.
Tractor Overturn Hazards


EDIT: Oopps sorry looks like I posted at the same time as crash325.
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #282  
Interesting thought about the differences between cable and chain. The elasticity could be a killer. Definitely adds another force vector. Time is also a solid factor (when what happens, when forces are rising or falling). Small fractions of seconds can make big differences when big forces balance against each other. What do they call it, a "tipping point?" In the case of this question, the tipping point could be when the front wheels are three inches off the ground (or less).

Using my winch, I always fear a rigging failure. It would be hard to jump fast enough.
Yeah, Im thinking rebound can be a big thing in initiating an extremely rapid backtip. I think the backflip possibility from a [fixed] drawbar comes down to :
a] Length of the drawbar behind the axle,
b] Height of the drawbar
c] Diameter of the tires,
c] Drive speed
d] Stored energy in the tether.

The 1st 3 govern the angle of tractor body at which the pull point comes to earth and the tip is no longer driven by tether force but is in coast mode. -- The 1st 4 tell how fast the tip can proceed. The last has the ability to accelerate the tip, particularly if a jerk happens storing more energy that then feeds into the tip after the tractor slows.
If coast mode occurs at too high a tip point the tractor can easily pass the balance point and continue over. If coast occurs lower it takes a lot of tip speed to coast over [not to mention that this drawbar length will probably take the pullpoint underground and actively resist the tipping].
Very important to note is that where no slip occurs the tipping speed will increase as the end of the drawbar lowers to the coast point. Even tho further tip past this point is resisted by both COG and drive force it may be too late with some configurations and speeds. Keep the drawbar long when you do hard pulling. Go slow. The best safe hi pull force will come form a long drawbar with its tip on the ground. Steering brakes.;)
larry
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #283  
Here is a article that I stole from another thread on TBN that talks about flipping from a load.
It may help or muddle but here it is. Near the end is when it talks about what happens when pulling on an immovable object.
Tractor Overturn Hazards


EDIT: Oopps sorry looks like I posted at the same time as crash325.

These folks are having too much fun and it will never end, :laughing::laughing:

Not going to let something like facts get in the way. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
:thumbsup:
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #284  
These folks are having too much fun and it will never end, :laughing::laughing:

Not going to let something like facts get in the way. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
:thumbsup:

Yep, armchair engineering at it's finest...
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #286  
LD1 said:
That is correct, but no one is saying a tractor cannot flip al by itself if the tires are locked(like frozen in ice).

But now take a chain and affix to a drawbar BELOW the axle of that tor tractor. And attach that chain to something solid. Grab the wheels and now see what havvens??? The chain drawn up tight (behind and BELOW the axle) counters the nose comming up. Ib the chain dont break, the nose will NOT go on over unless the tractor goes backwards toward the chain. Which is counter-intuitive because the tractor is driving the other diraction.

Yup, the chain being below the axle results in less leverage to raise the nose. Yup, the lower it goes, the lower the leverage gets. No, it never reaches zero unless the connection point gets to the ground. To be fair I will say that when it gets close to the ground, the leverage to raise the nose is so slim that any tractor of standard configuration would need unreasonably high power to lift its nose off the ground.

Of course by the time it gets that low, the nose is already well up in the air, bringing the required power level back into a possibly reasonable level.

And remember that although it may be counterintuitive, if the nose comes up even an inch, the axle and tires have already moved rearward towards the load. So no matter how counterintuitive it may be, that is what is happening.
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #287  
Yep....The ol' "It can't possibly happen even though it HAS happened, just because I can't understand WHY it happened" syndrome in action......

Anything can happen, at any time...all one can do is try to lower their risk.
Some of the scenarios and justifications on this thread have gone a tad over the top...
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #288  
Yep, armchair engineering at it's finest...

Yep....The ol' "It can't possibly happen even though it HAS happened, just because I can't understand WHY it happened" syndrome in action......
The ol' Magical Cause Syndrome. Leads to better understanding of everything that is not obvious.:rolleyes:
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #289  
An elastic connection does not add another "vector." What it does do is reduce the energy going into the tip-up during the stretch, stores that energy, and add that energy back into the tip-up during the rebound. To be perfectly accurate it probably converts and wastes a bit of the energy as heat.

So when it adds tip-up energy back to the tractor during the rebound, that may make enough difference to flip the tractor. But if that is so, a bit more power from the engine could do the same thing without the elastic hookup.

So anybody who says a tractor cannot flip with an inelastic chain, but could with an elastic cable, is admitting that a tractor with enough power to lift itself, against the decreasing leverage of the load as the drawbar lowers, can flip with an inelastic chain.
 
   / Preventing tractor back flip #290  
The vector I was speaking of was the tractor end of the cable moving back toward the load. I have loaned some chains and had them come back to me stretched (a.k.a., ruined). Not much rebound in them. The cable gives the tractor a way to multiply the tipping force over the time it is storing its power in the cable. This could be a huge factor and the difference between flipping and not flipping.

When I lived on the beach and had my little '51 flathead four Jeep, I could pull just about anything out of the high sand, trucks, Caddies, you name it. I had 100 feet of 3/4" polypropylene line. My little Jeep would take a low gear run and use its power to store force in the stretched line. About the time I could pull no farther, I'd lock the brakes and the stretched line would snap the Caddy out of the soft sand.
 

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