</font><font color="blue" class="small">( <font color="red">It sounds like the draft control isn't working properly, or maybe you could adjust it to pick up more weight? </font>
The draft control works fine. My point was that even with draft control engaged and working that I get wheel slip on the front wheels before the rear wheels when going up hill. A previous post had ascribed this to hot hydraulic oil and I asked how hot hydraulic oil could differentially affect the front and rear wheels. No one has offed an explanation how that could happen.
The previous post was by RegL and said in part: <font color="red"> Your correct as long as you don't include hill climbing as normal operation. When the hyd oil is cool all wheels seem to pull evenly and traction is good. When the oil gets very hot and your driving up hill, one or both front wheel will get spinning and the rear wheels don't seem to be doing anything. It's like, cool oil= 4wd and hot oil+1 or 2wd. I think the oil pt uses in the hydraulics looses it's viscosity at high temps and passes through the wheel motors under heavy load.</font> )</font>
<font color="purple"> </font> I don't think I explained my point very well concerning PT performance with cool verses hot hyd oil.( Sometimes it's hard to type what I'm thinking /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif. The front wheel spinning that you and I both described is correct when climbing forward. If you turn around and try to back up, you will find that the rear wheels will break loose first. clearly, what ever end of the tractor is pointing up hill has the least amount of traction.
The point I was trying to make is that when the hyd oil is cool, the wheels that have the most traction, and therefor the most load, will keep pulling and take you up the hill. When the oil gets to hot the wheel motors under the same load will stall. The uphill wheels will stall also if they have enough traction but usually they just break loose and spin.
The way my PT is plumbed, the front and rear wheel on each side is in series so the same fluid is running through both wheel motors. That's why I believe when the oil gets hot, it thins out to a point where it just passes thru the wheel motor with the most load with out turning it but can still spin the other wheel that doesn't have as much traction. I think the cure will be either better cooling or a different oil that doesn't loose it's viscosity at hotter temps.( I think it's refered to as viscosity shearing).
OK, I hope that was clearer. If not, maybe someone can read my mind and post it for me.LOL!