Use for draw bar?

/ Use for draw bar? #23  
I'd like to get a swinging draw bar for my B7200 but I haven't seen one on a machine yet.
Are they all the same?:confused:

Towing with my 3pt hitch can work but when backing the hitch can lift at interesting times.:confused2:
Anybody have photos of their swinging draw bar or of a method to keep the 3pt from lifting unexpectedly?

If you look very closely at the first page of the PDF that was posted, you will see struts coming up from the 3ph drawbar that connect to the place where the top link would normally connect. That is what we used on our 8n ford, which did not have a swinging drawbar, but due to this thread, I know know it was merely missing in action. When you use the drawbar lift limiters, it is important to turn the 3ph lift OFF so it cannot accidentally come up, because it will pretzel the lift limiters.

The link below was generated by going to Tractor Supply, and searching on the word "drawbar" (in case the link expires) You will want two uppers, two lowers, and a rotation lock, all of which are shown on the page the link points to. The also have a swinging drawbar.


Search Results
 
/ Use for draw bar? #24  
And it can happen quickly, too. Before you know it.

Yep...about ¾ of a second to the point of no return (75°...then the tractor goes all the way over). Good reason to make sure your seatbelt is used. The ROPS will prevent a full rollover, but if you're not belted in, you'll be injured or killed when the tractor rolls sideways after it hits the ROPS.

Anyway, you can also use the draw bar for towing a pull behind rotary cutter. Pull behind cutters require less PTO HP then same sized cutters on the 3ph.

During the last snowstorm in PA, I used the draw bar and a tow strap to pull my wife's Subaru Outback out of a drift.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #25  
My 4010 CUT has a fixed drawbar, but I also bought one for the 3ph. Needed it to convert a JD M soil ripper to 3 ph. You can screw on 1 or more different ball sizes to tow various trailers, etc. and leave them there vs. having to remove and to change the balls on a fixed drawbar.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #26  
My Kioti CK30 has a drawbar neatly stored under the center of the read axle. Take a couple of pins out, turn it around, re-attach and a drawbar like I used for pull behind bush hogs, hayracks, corn wagons, etc when I was a kid.

My question: When I need to pull something stout (like a stump) I attach a chain to the stump and to the drawbar holder (the part the drawbar attaches to). That is the same or better than actually turning the drawbar around and attaching to it. Right??
 
/ Use for draw bar? #27  
IMHO.. I woulddn't cain my expensive tractor to something like a stump.. and deffinately never to the end of a drawbar ( lever ).. if I absolutely had to.. I think I'd find a big tire rim to put some angle ont he chain.. but still.. you've hitched your tractor to an anchor and are hoping for the best... I'm glad I don't cut down alot of trees.. cause I'd not use my tractor to stump them.. i'd dig down and chop them out or burn them. I also have an old electric chainsaw with a sacrifical bar and blade that I have cut stumps under ground level after digging around them. keeps the tractor on all 4 tires..

soundguy
 
/ Use for draw bar? #28  
lakngulf stated:
My question: When I need to pull something stout (like a stump) I attach a chain to the stump and to the drawbar holder (the part the drawbar attaches to). That is the same or better than actually turning the drawbar around and attaching to it. Right??

No and wrong! The drawbar and it's housing should only be used to draw items (tow) (not yank and release as might occur with a stump letting go), at the drawbar's attachment level- ie. low center of gravity. Doing what you are doing could end up flipping the tractor backward; and what Soundguy said.

And to answer what kind of tractor comes without a drawbar- my Kioti came without one- but did include a top link.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #29  
I will give this some thought. I always thought a drawbar (or at least what I consider to be a draw bar) to be the STRONGEST point at which a tractor can pull. I am not talking about anything to do with the 3pt or the FEL, but the bar that attaches under the center portion of the rear axle.

As a farm boy on Allis Chambers, and then on Deutsch, and then on JD, we hooked up anything and everything that the tractor would pull. We hooked it to the drawbar because that was the part of the tractor that would not tear up. I am not talking about yanking, I am just talking about hooking up, putting the tractor in the lowest pull gear available, giving a little gas and letting out on the clutch gently. Either the item comes along with the tractor, or the tractor stalls, or tires churn. I have always considered a tractor not to be strong enough to destroy it's drawbar hookup

I will defer to those with more experience in knowledge, as it sounds like I have some un-learning to do. So far my CK30 has not been strong enough to pull out a stump more than 2 inch diameter, without some serious digging around it. I consider myself doing more damage to the FEL digging around it than to the drawbar unit pulling it.
 
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/ Use for draw bar? #30  
I have always used my drawbar with a 2" ball to pull logs with and to yank out smaller trees and shrubs. The center of gravity is low enough, that the tractor will usually either stall or spin out. At least that has been the case for me for about the last 45-50 years.
I like the rim idea and the pole method to generate lift when pulling out a tree or stump.

Mike
 
/ Use for draw bar? #31  
I will give this some thought. I always thought a drawbar (or at least what I consider to be a draw bar) to be the STRONGEST point at which a tractor can pull. I am not talking about anything to do with the 3pt or the FEL, but the bar that attaches under the center portion of the rear axle.
Right, I agree with you as long as you are pulling a load, towing something. Trying to remove a stump is somewhat different. It is an immovable object resisting the tractor's pulling strength, and when it eventually gives up and releases certain forces go with the release unlike a wagon or cart of dump trailer, haywagon, manure spreader, etc. Those object have wheels and are meant to be pulled/towed by a tractor/ vehicle. Stumps are generally considered to be objects that like where they are and have few plans of changing zip codes:) I'm not saying you can't do it successfully, but it is not to my understanding the purpose of the drawbar, strictly speaking, and therefore it poses inherent risks greater than use for which the bar was intended.

As a farm boy on Allis Chambers, and then on Deutsch, and then on JD, we hooked up anything and everything that the tractor would pull. We hooked it to the drawbar because that was the part of the tractor that would not tear up. I am not talking about yanking, I am just talking about hooking up, putting the tractor in the lowest pull gear available, giving a little gas and letting out on the clutch gently. Either the item comes along with the tractor, or the tractor stalls, or tires churn. I have always considered a tractor not to be strong enough to destroy it's drawbar hookup.
I agree with that, and going easy until it spins or stalls.

I will defer to those with more experience in knowledge, as it sounds like I have some un-learning to do. So far my CK30 has not been strong enough to pull out a stump more than 2 inch diameter, without some serious digging around it. I consider myself doing more damage to the FEL digging around it than to the drawbar unit pulling it.
Guess you need a backhoe or a sacrificial chainsaw, as someone else mentioned.:)
 
/ Use for draw bar? #32  
I consider the drawbar to be the strongest part for pulling as well.

I would never want anyone to take my advise and wind up getting hurt.
However, I do believe it is very unlikely a tractor will overturn backwards when hooked to a drawbar that is well below the axle level. Having said that, I would not use it in that manner unless I had a ROPS and a seat belt. I might give it a go in a very low gear without a ROPS, but I would not go wild on it.

I would like a mechanical engineer or an agricultural engineer to chime in on the drawbar / flipping issue. I find them to be very sober minded, and they would surely know better than I.

One caveat: I flew down to Florida in the junior year of my first degree for a job interview at a dairy farm just north of the big lake in the center of the state. First interview question, he took me to look at the biggest tractor I had ever seen, a large four wheel drive articulating Case. We walked around behind and the rear end, and the case was ripped off the tractor. The question was "Is this our fault or do we have a warranty claim?" I asked "was the load hooked to the drawbar?" He replied "yes." I replied "it is a warranty claim because a tractor ought not be able to out pull it's own draw bar." If I am wrong now, I was certainly wrong then!
 
/ Use for draw bar? #33  
I was reading the posts on this thread and thought to myself, I think I have a draw bar on my tractor. In the almost 2 years I have had my tractor didn't have the need for it or think about if I had one. Checked the manual and sure enough I have one. Nice to learn some of the uses and safety tips. Unfortunately accidents happed so fast and it is sad to read about someone losing their life.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #34  
My question: When I need to pull something stout (like a stump) I attach a chain to the stump and to the drawbar holder (the part the drawbar attaches to). That is the same or better than actually turning the drawbar around and attaching to it. Right??

You should attach to the end of the drawbar for hard pulls, not to the drawbar holder.

There is a lot of misinformation on the internet in general and on this thread in particular.

The reason for using the drawbar is that it is engineered so that if the front wheels come up and the tractor starts to overturn backwards, the back end of the drawbar lowers to the ground as the front comes up. This automatically reduces the overturning torque to zero and the tractor will not turn over. This feature allows the operator time to disengage the clutch, release the HST pedal, or let off the throttle.

Attaching the chain to the drawbar mount appears stronger, but defeats the important safety feature of lowering the tip of the drawbar.

As long as you do not jerk the load by accelerating with a slack chain, your tractor should be designed to handle pulling against an immovable object so long as you use the correct drawbar.

A few common misconceptions are:

1. "Attaching below the rear axle will prevent overturns." As logical as the claim sounds, there is nothing magical about the rear axle and this attachment is not guaranteed to prevent overturns. The thing that overturns tractors is a torque generated by the propulsive forward force caused by the traction of the tires against the ground and the rearward force from whatever is being towed. The moment arm is the attachment height above the ground. Tractors can and have overturned from towing chains attached to and below the rear axle.

The only safe hitch point is the correct drawbar.

2. The device which attaches to the lower two arms of the 3-point hitch is a tow bar, not a drawbar. Because of its ability to raise & lower a tow ball it is convenient to use to tow anything with a trailer hitch. It does not have the built-in safety of a true drawbar and should not be used for a hard pull.

P.S. I am an engineer.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #35  
Yeah for curly.

Ps I is a enginerd too.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #37  
Thanks, Curly, for the information. You are right....I assumed the drawbar holder would be as strong or stronger than the drawbar itself. But now I completely missed the safety feature associated with the extended drawbar. So far, when I have hooked to anything that stout (1) the tractor has not been able to pull it and (2) I have had the box blade still attached, so any back tilting would have been limited when the box blade hit the ground.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #38  
Ignorance is sometimes embarrasing, but I think I favor that over stupidity.

Draw bar:

Not that I need one, I don't know, but I've been seeing them around and I don't know what they are used for. So, let me have it. You can pound on me if you like, just slip the answer in there somewhere.
If You think it "stupid" not to know what a Draw bar is for? then you can call me "stupider":D http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/attachments/156915-please-explain-use-toolbar-drawbar.html
 
/ Use for draw bar? #39  
Yeah, thanks CurlyDave! Are you an ME? I am an EE.

Instead of taking the EE statics and dynamics combo course, I took the ME statics and dynamics. I was SO good at ME dynamics, I took it twice! :mad:

I took it first as a summer course, which was shear madness, and combine that with this: I don't know what part of the Middle East my dynamics prof came from, but I was the only student not from his part of the world, and I didn't understand a word he said. I guarantee you, if I had not been there, he would have taught the course in his native language. I wish he had! All of the other students would have understood him completely, I would would have misunderstood him just as well as ever!:D

I failed, but I took it again immediately in the fall semester, and I got a B. I should have stuck with the EE combo course, and counted my blessings, but I wanted a bit more mechanical exposure. It didn't really hurt my GPA, because at that university, the classes from my earlier degree, and the latter degree all figured into one hard to move GPA. I remember a prof. saying one time, only half joking: "if you mess with me I'll fail you over and over until you wash out of school!" I said something like "Doctor So-and-so, I've got a GPA of xxx with yyy hours, so you do the math. Are you sure you want that much face time.":D I got an A in that course!

I mentioned a job interview story earlier, and a scenario with a huge tractor with a broken rear case. One thing I forgot to mention was the part of the discussion on how the tractor driver tried to pull the load. I asked if the driver snatched the load (which was a likewise huge water-filled roller for flattening / compressing the land) and the farmer said he witnessed the event, and it was a slow, steady pull-off in a low gear. The roller attached directly to the drawbar, so there was no hidden slack that had to be taken up.

It was very fortunate that the facts of the case allowed me to give the farmer / interviewer the answer he no doubt wanted to hear. Otherwise, that was going to be a very BAD interview question.
 
/ Use for draw bar? #40  
CurlyDave, thanks for answering my question with good reason included, not a "just because" answer.:thumbsup:

I went to buy the TSC swinging draw bar but it looked "awfully long".
Now that length makes sense.
It's the "anti-tip-over feature" that didn't come to mind at first.
 
 

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