3RRL
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2005
- Messages
- 6,931
- Tractor
- 55HP 4WD KAMA 554 and 4 x 4 Jinma 284
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Take this to an extreme. Lengthen the axle to 10 feet wide. You will get the same result.
There is a pivot in the center of the axle. A fulcrum, like a teeter-totter. The width has done nothing for you.)</font>
Take your example even further. Widen the front axle way out ...say 50' or so per side or even wider (say wider...infiinity) so the rotation of the tractor has to occur within the new axle width. In other words, the weight/height of the tractor could pivot within the new axle width before the higher side tire comes off the ground. Kind of like the rubber band on a wind up airplane,
Now, ASSUMING THE PIVOT WILL NOT BREAK when the tractor is tilted, at some time it will hit a "stop" in it's pivot. Or will hit the side of the frame or engine, stopping the tipping of the tractor...but it does not rotate 360°. Then the tractor will never tip over...impossible. At this point the slope would have to approach or exceed 45° for one wheel to come over the other. (If wide enough to wrap around the Earth it would never tip over...ever) The rear axle can tip it all it wants but never get it to flip over when the front axle pivot hits its stop.
If you don't believe me, you can nail a couple of 2x4's perpendicular to another (like a cross) with "u" shaped nails to represent some pivot between them...make them both 4" long. Now flip it over and remember (approximately) the force required. Now take that top 4" long 2x4 and nail it to an 8 footer(the longer axle) and try to tip it over.
So will widening the front stance help in stability? I think Yes. How much?...I can't tell you how much, but I know it helps to some (undertermined but perhaps not practical) degree if the above is true. Better than narrow, that's for sure.
There is a pivot in the center of the axle. A fulcrum, like a teeter-totter. The width has done nothing for you.)</font>
Take your example even further. Widen the front axle way out ...say 50' or so per side or even wider (say wider...infiinity) so the rotation of the tractor has to occur within the new axle width. In other words, the weight/height of the tractor could pivot within the new axle width before the higher side tire comes off the ground. Kind of like the rubber band on a wind up airplane,
Now, ASSUMING THE PIVOT WILL NOT BREAK when the tractor is tilted, at some time it will hit a "stop" in it's pivot. Or will hit the side of the frame or engine, stopping the tipping of the tractor...but it does not rotate 360°. Then the tractor will never tip over...impossible. At this point the slope would have to approach or exceed 45° for one wheel to come over the other. (If wide enough to wrap around the Earth it would never tip over...ever) The rear axle can tip it all it wants but never get it to flip over when the front axle pivot hits its stop.
If you don't believe me, you can nail a couple of 2x4's perpendicular to another (like a cross) with "u" shaped nails to represent some pivot between them...make them both 4" long. Now flip it over and remember (approximately) the force required. Now take that top 4" long 2x4 and nail it to an 8 footer(the longer axle) and try to tip it over.
So will widening the front stance help in stability? I think Yes. How much?...I can't tell you how much, but I know it helps to some (undertermined but perhaps not practical) degree if the above is true. Better than narrow, that's for sure.