</font><font color="blue" class="small">( OK, so if we used stronger steel in the frame as I was saying and reinforce them like we do now we would have a winning
combination. If the frame has less tendency to deform because of the new steel or other metal maybe less cross members on
the frame would be needed. You can't go using some crappy metal for the frame and expect it to last. Panoz Auto uses
aluminum in their frames for cars and they are very strong. Well designed frames they have. I think I was trying to say that if
tractor manufactures made frames like that for tractors they would be even better. Using different metals and alloys to create a
super frame that would be very strong. And if I had a choice I would go back and relive the 1980's because I was not old enough
to remember much.
I don't get why everybody is so hard on Nomad for bringing up one point that we may see in the near future. After all look how
fast computers have changed and are changing. JMHO.
============== </font><font color="blue" class="small">(
But we can't count the computer, because the is just for info gathering & control. That is outside Nomad's rules.
What good would an aluminumn tractor frame be? It would weight less, so we would need to add more cast iron weights to the front & rear of the tractor. Silly!
If we come up with a stronger alloy that uses less cross members, the tractor will weigh less - and we will have to add more cast weight again. Silly!
In either case, the exotic metals & engineering will cost more. And the extra cast iron weights will cost more. So you will have a tractor that weighs & preforms the same as before - and it costs more. What is the benefit of using the 'higher technology'? It would just be a total waste. It would create a _worse_ tractor, not a better one!
A racing or touring car _needs_ high tech - the lighter it is, the faster it goes.
A tractor needs to weigh a lot. there is no point in developing a different frame. If you do, it does not gain you _anything_. The tractor will just need more weight added to make up for what you took away.
JD made some tube frames on some of their implements. Higher-tech alloys so they were stronger. Then they had to fill the tube with metal shavings because the implement was too light, wouldn't stay in the ground. Over time the metal slag inside the alloy tube would form a gas, and presurize the tube. Several farmers wer hurt by trying to dril or weld into these tubes, and the pressurized gas let loose. In addition the alloy was hard to weld, making repairs difficult.
Was this good higher technology? A solid steel bar would have been cheaper and stronger & weighed as much as the hi-tech alloy tube JD developed. Which is _better_, the high tech or the good strong old way?
Perhaps high tech moves slowly because farmers are smarter than most people, richer, and can figure out the good from the bad. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
Rather than developing some stronger steel frame and calling it better as you do - just make the current frame a little thicker if it is too weak. Doesn't cost much, gives us a stronger frame, and we can buy one or 2 less cast iron weights. Now _that_ is a whole lot better - not some high-tech frame that costs double.
For a car you are right - less weight = more speed for a racer, better fuel milage for a transportation car. But you are not thinking right for a tractor - what you & nomad are talking about is totally worthless technology for a tractor. It would be a step backwards.
Why do you want to move agriculture backwards?
Nomad is fond of electric solar powered tractors, and other such. Now, whoever could _produce_ a good working totally different machine - THAT would have value. That would be a major step forward. No one, certainly not nomad, has actually come up with something useful that works. But human nature is always looking for some way to take that big step forward. On that one small point I agree with nomad. It's wonderful to dream & try.
But in the real world, the advances in technology need to provide a benifit. So far, none of the dreaming has provided an advantage over the old tried & true ways.
--->Paul