OK I'll try again. The wide front end is Always better, all the time. It averages two points on the ground that are several feet apart so one wheel falling into a hole has only half the effect of a narrow front end dropping into the same hole. Even before it hits the stops the line of rotation runs to the low side tire not the pivot pin. When making a turn the wide front tire is in line with the turning force where it can resist that force in compression instead of being behind it. Think of it as a lever trying to right the tractor as it tips to the side. The narrow front end has a four inch lever arm while the wide front end has perhaps 36 inches That’s a nine to one advantage. And the inside tire has that same lever arm being pushed down on it by the weight of the tire and rim.
I hear ya. But your theory is just not mathematically correct. On a wide front tractor, until the front axle oscillates to the stops, the balance of the tractor isn't affected by how wide the front tires are set. That only happens when the axle hits the stops.
As for a wide front handling uneven terrain smoother, yes it does, for the reasons you talked about.
With a wide front on a sideslope, when the tractor tips to the point of contacting the oscillation stops, then the width of the front tires comes into play. And will most certainly add stability to the tractor.
Unless, like has been discussed before, the upper side tire rides up on a hump, or the lower side tire falls into a hole big enough to hit the stopper, then the wide front applies the leverage you are talking about and actually contributes to the tractor tipping sideways, downhill.
To prove this theory, load your FEL with as big a load as your tractor will handle on flat ground. Then while on flat ground, drive one front tire off into a ditch deeper than the front axle can oscillate to overcome. As soon as the tire going into the ditch loses contact with the gound the balance of the tractor changes dramatically, and in most cases the opposite rear tire will lift off the ground until the front tire returns to solid footing or the tractor tips over, whichever happens first!!! At this time the lever you talked about comes into play and contributes to the rollover of the tractor.
But don't mistake what I'm saying as being in favor of a tricycle tractor. I'm not. They are inherently dangerous. Not because they will start to tip sideways quicker, but because they have no safety net (wide front) to catch them once they start tipping.
