Woodsman30350
Bronze Member
I have checked every spec I can find on my 3040 and cannot find any reference to the PTO horsepower. I states the PTO runs at 540 rpm but not the horsepower. Is it the same at the tractor H.P. rating?
I'll take a stab at this. It may not be exact because different rating philosophies may be used by different manufacturers. But it's illustrative of the process.I have checked every spec I can find on my 3040 and cannot find any reference to the PTO horsepower. I states the PTO runs at 540 rpm but not the horsepower. Is it the same at the tractor H.P. rating?
Just spoke to Montana in Arkansas and they quoted the PTO horsepower for my 3040 as being 22. Seems a little low to me but I guess I will have to go with a 5 footer cutter.
Thanks for the inputs.
jas67 ,
Anytime that gears are used to increase of decrease rpm, there will be some HP losses.
I believe the HST is always pumping fluid when the tractor is running, and fluid is moving, with very little pressure, and taking up some HP, therefore the difference between a gear tractor PTO HP, and one with HST.
Those are huge losses from the engine HP. Makes me think they are quoting gross engine HP rather than the net HP available after driving the fan, water pump, and alternator.J_J,
I understand that there are drivetrain losses in gears, due to friction, and also that the HST is always pumping. I was only wondering why, for example the HP less for a B2920 is 2HP more than that of a B2320. The B2920, B2620, and B2320 are all basically the same tractor with the same transmission, just with different engines. The specs are (engine HP,PTO HP, loss between the two):
B2920 29,21,8
B2620 26,19,7
B2320 23,17,6
Similarly, the B7610 and B7510:
B7610 24,18,6
B7510 21,16,5
I don't know if this holds true for the newer With both guys scratching their heads at this point unsure how a 65hp Montana could out-pull an 80hp John Deer they loaded up both tractors and too them to a dyno. Turns out the 80hp John Deer was only putting out around 73hp to the draw bar, but the 65hp Montana was putting out 85hp!!! QUOTE]
If they put them on a dyno, they didn't measure drawbar horsepower! They measured PTO horsepower. The only question I would have is what rpm thye measured the power at because that makes a difference. If they were both measured at the same pto rpm (540 or 1000 rpm), that's a fair test.
One of the major poblems with quoting power ratings is that they are generally quoted as maximum shaft horsepower at rated engine speed. Then somebody will quote a tractor horsepower as pto horsepower. If you're making a comparison, you have to read the sales brochure and make sure that the horsepower is quoted is the same horsepower for each machine.Maybe the Deere was quoted as engine shaft horsepower and the Montana was quoted as PTO horsepower. you have to really watch out for the marketeers!
If they were on a chassis dyno how is that not drawbar HP??
Regardless of the RPM at which a tractor is rated for their spec sheet, if the tested them the same way on a dyno (either both at max rpm or both at PTO rpm) that is a fair real world test IMO