What causes tractor rollovers?

   / What causes tractor rollovers? #12  
When you lose traction and gravity gets in the mix....glad your okay,maybe tilt meter come in handy.
 
   / What causes tractor rollovers?
  • Thread Starter
#15  
I flew helicopters in the Army for 18 years and what they teach is that there is a critical angle and a rolling motion that causes rollovers. I always look in the user manuals to see what the critical angle is, no one ever has it listed. If the critical angle were published an an inclinometer were installed there would probably be less rollovers. Even a simple bubble gauge would help. In any case what has worked for me is the pinch factor, when my **** starts to pinch a hole in the seat cover I back off what ever I am doing.
That seems to be a good working indicator..
 
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   / What causes tractor rollovers? #16  
I have not personally tipped a tractor, but the times ive been nervous about it have all involved using the FELs.

Im guessing most people have concerns about slopes ive just never driven on the likes of. One thing I would say is we tend to form our first assumption of how tippy something is from how it looks, but tractors can be deceiving as far as their center of gravity. A lot of times the entire top half and sometimes more than that weighs very little and the actual center of gravity is somewhere vertically around or below the bottom of the frame. You as the operator are way above that so you become extremely sensitive to any sudden roll accelerations just because they are amplified by your long 'radius' from it, but usually get nowhere even close to tipping. You would start falling out of the seat before the tractor itself is in danger of tipping.

It's probably a good thing that things 'feel worse than they are' from the operators station just so that we're subconsciously more cautious.
 
   / What causes tractor rollovers? #17  
A number from the manufacturer is good for only one angle and configuration. Change any part and you may roll over when you think you are safe.

You could be on a side slope that your inclinometer says is safe, but raise your loader bucket one foot and you roll over. Drop one wheel a couple of inches into a hole and roll over. Lift your rear implement and roll over.

Bruce
 
   / What causes tractor rollovers? #18  
I know I wouldn't feel very comfortable in the seat of that tractor, but that kind of terrain is not atypical of the Washington Palouse wheat country. Noted he is an 8 wheeler and those extra wheels are there for stability as well as flotation and traction.
Tractor-on-Almota-Grade-Palouse-Country.jpg
 
   / What causes tractor rollovers? #19  
I flew helicopters in the Army for 18 years and what they teach is that there is a critical angle and a rolling motion that causes rollovers. I always look in the user manuals to see what the critical angle is, no one ever has it listed. If the critical angle were published an an inclinometer were installed there would probably be less rollovers. Even a simple bubble gauge would help. In any case what has worked for me is the pinch factor, when my **** starts to pinch a hole in the seat cover I back off what ever I am doing.
At my last USAF duty site, Almaden AFS above San Jose, CA, 2 new choppers came and gave us an air show. OMG those guys were awesome. They did things that didn't seem possible. Upside down figure 8 for example. Unfortunately I cannot get on a chopper, knock me out and throw me on but it ain't going to happen voluntarily. Army kept at least those 2 aircraft bright and shiny too. Meanwhile back at the ranch I don't park tractors like my avatar pic. Was scraping road, caught a root that bounced it. Dropped front bucket immediately and of course the battery went dead. That one was high 8 on sphincter factor
 
   / What causes tractor rollovers? #20  
The guys mowing the medians and sides of the highways is Vermont amaze me.
Vermont isn't called The Green Mountain state for no reason. Some of the slopes have got to be 20°, at least.
The tractors are large, cabbed utility machines...mostly red, so I'd guess they're Massey's. Some have dual wheels on the rear, some don't.
They all run across the slopes towing a good-sized rotary cutter (I'd estimate 10 footers ± a foot in width)
 

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