MinnesotaEric
Super Member
I looked up the specs for your loader, the GPM (10GPM) and pressure (2556psi). http://www.kioti.com/products/attachments/front-end-loaders/kl6010/
Here is the formula. 10x2556=25,560/1714=14.91HP I have very close to max lift at idle with the L4240. I don't have a way to compare and see how much it will lift at idle and full throttle but it not much of a difference. Horsepower has nothing to do with lift specs on a tractor. The size of the cylinders on the loader and the relief valve setting on a loader are what it important. I could take CS2410 and put larger cylinders on the loader to make it lift more. The loader cylce times would be slower though. As far as the debate on HP, if Island tractor is pulling a box blade with his DK40 and it fills up and the tractor looses traction what good would more power be? Where you will really notice more power is driving the tractor down the road. The tractor with more power will pull the hills better. More power will allow you to run larger PTO driven implements.
Here is a video where I noticed bogging, even at 1:20 backing up.
I agree![]()
Okay, I'm tracking with you.
I found a simplified cheat-sheet for everybody reading along.
http://web.applied.com/assets/attachments/779D4407-D2AE-6FAA-7DA1CEDE2268977B.pdf
Our formula is hp = gpm x pressure / 1714
I puzzled out part of this in paging through my service manual at some point for somebody and have the benefit of leaving myself some notes on the calculated flows as rated by volume per engine revolution.
The NX series opens its relief at 3271 psi and then settles down to 2560 api according to page 11-3 in the NX service manual. The HST models flow more fluid than the gear versions. Hydraulic flow is slightly less than the spec you used at 9.615 gpm. Total flow with both sides of the pump for hydraulics, power steering, and the HST transmission is 17.857 gpm. Neither of those specs are published that accurately, but I did the math on another day and figured out the gpm flow rates.
We take these revised numbers with slightly less gpm, but higher peak pressure at we arrive at 18.34 hp for the hydraulics and a total for the pump at 34.07 hp. The engine pumps out just shy of 60hp and around I think I recall something like 140-50 ft. pounds of torque. In context, the engine should never bog, but due to restrictions, bends, the water pump, alternator, charge pump, internal frictions, and losses in the fluid to heat, we arrive at an engine that bogs down when auguring into something and due to momentum, overwhelming its own specs. Doubtlessly a larger engine with more tore to its hp rating would do better, but I've been pleased with my NX's performance.
Anyway, thanks. I learned through this.