When the rear PTO is stated as 540/1000, what does that mean ? That the PTO can operate at 2 different RPMs? Or is there actually 2 different PTO "shafts"
ALso does the 540 RPM mean at idle that is the speed its rotating?
Thanks in advance
I just LOVE old threads like this one; 11-12 years on and the question still isn't answered. I don't know why someone had decided to call PTO's by speed instead of by gear ratio? My Deutz Dx-6.05 has 3 pto's: one in the front, and a 2-speed one in the rear. The 'speeds' are 1000, 540, 1000 respectively, as I start
casing snowblowers for the front or rear.
PTO speeds are valid at a SINGLE engine rpm ONLY which as far as I know is the rated rpm for the engine AT which it puts out its rated horsepower but this is NO standard. My OEM tach is long gone and I'm using a chinese electrical one with no markings at all. My engine's rated (power) rpm is 2300 so for 540 rpm on the rear PTO 4.3:1 has to be the gear ratio. To make the PTO turn at 1000rpm at the same engine rpm of 2300 the ratio has to be 2.3:1. But the book says that in this single-stub configuration the
reference engine RPM is 2100, suggesting ratios of 3.9 and 2.1. That stil leaves me in the dark because i don't have a 6.05 manual, only a 4.70 one with the 6.05 being a 6-jug engine instead of 4 which probably changed the story quite a bit. To put it another way the 540 PTO is more geared, it's as if it was gear 1 instead of gear 2, it also means that torque going to the implement is almost double at 540 than at 1000. Yet the manual shows different torques i.e. 1030/1180 which conflicts with my version of the reality of physics because the power curve on all engines that I know of puts out exactly the same torque at a given rpm, and that torque goes up with gearing.
I have
never yet used a PTO in my life and at now at 82 I sure am still far from seeing the full picture (which is why I was googling the topic in the first place). People have advised me that a snow-blower on a 100hp machine needs a 1000rpm gearbox because of the power level which is another topic, AND a wrong argument on top of it. 100hp pto shafts are usually higher off he ground and it's this geometry that suggest an offset gearbox so that the universal joint geometry will fall into the lower regime that results in longer joint life (3deg=100%, 25degrees=5%). It so happens that virtually all these 1000rpm gearboxes (which are available reversible as well) offer gear ratios that return the 1000rpm pto shaft to the 540 which a snowblower must have (fan efficiency falls off rapidly above 600).
If I use a tractor PTO rpm of 1000 that becomes the input into a 1000rpm snowblower gearbox then I accomplish diddley squat because it's all the same as 540-to-540!
I'll be happy when I get to the bottom of all this
