Hopefully you don't have a loader on this tractor? I always found anything mounted in that location gives absolutely-blinding reflections off the back of the loader bucket. I've gone so far as to disconnect lighting in the front grille on one tractor, and use only ROPS-mounted lights.I just installed a 20" LED light bar on top of the grill guard.
Hopefully you don't have a loader on this tractor? I always found anything mounted in that location gives absolutely-blinding reflections off the back of the loader bucket. I've gone so far as to disconnect lighting in the front grille on one tractor, and use only ROPS-mounted lights.
Yeah, always a tough one. I've found that hanging lights under the top bar of the ROPS works great for tractors run ROPS-up, or either side (outside) of ROPS at shoulder height works well for tractors run ROPS-down. My tractor with them at shoulder height on outside has a brush guard around each light, that keeps any side-scattering away from my eyes when I turn around.
A light up front is still useful, especially when working in front of the tractor, as the hood can create a long shadow from lighting on the ROPS. But I like to be able to turn that light off when running, as my bucket is so often at just the perfect height to reflect those back at me. I usually have to run with my bucket at least a foot off the ground, as parts of my property are very hilly, and it will dig in places if left much lower than that.
light on rops has to be on top with the bar up, or you will be blinded terribly. I just did this and even with custom blinders made, its not great. it needs to be above your head.Yeah that's an idea. It would be easy enough to make a shield to keep the lights out of my eyes. I have a large basket bolted to my ROPS that I use to carry saws and other stuff so I usually keep it down unless I am doing something that I feel it needs to be up. I will most likely play around with lighting on the ROPS at some point as I like good light output when working after dark.
If 1 watt of halogen light = 20 lumens, then the OP's four halogen lights that total 12000 lumens would draw 600 watts or 50 amps. That's more than the 35 amp OEM alternator on his MF 1759 tractor can produce???Here's some info:
willy
- Incandescent: 1 watt = roughly 15 lumens
- Halogen: 1 watt = roughly 20 lumens
- CFL (Compact Fluorescent): 1 watt = roughly 70 lumensLED (Light Emitting Diode): 1 watt = roughly 80 lumens
John Deere disagrees. They mount all of their lights at shoulder height. Never been a problem for me, or tens of thousands of other users.light on rops has to be on top with the bar up, or you will be blinded terribly. I just did this and even with custom blinders made, its not great. it needs to be above your head.
Yep. This wasn’t an uncommon problem, back in the day. That’s why old sealed beam headlights were only 50-60 watts.If 1 watt of halogen light = 20 lumens, then the OP's four halogen lights that total 12000 lumens would draw 600 watts or 50 amps. That's more than the 35 amp OEM alternator on his MF 1759 tractor can produce???
Hes claiming the led’s put out 12,000 limens. Thats 150 watts at 12 v, so about 12.5 amps.If 1 watt of halogen light = 20 lumens, then the OP's four halogen lights that total 12000 lumens would draw 600 watts or 50 amps. That's more than the 35 amp OEM alternator on his MF 1759 tractor can produce???
My error. I read the OP's post to mean the halogen lights on the tractor put out 12000 lumens. Halogen lights produce 20 lumens per watt. 12000 lumens divided by 20 lumens equals 600 watts divided by 12 volts equals 50 amps.Hes claiming the led’s put out 12,000 limens. Thats 150 watts at 12 v, so about 12.5 amps.
But ive run into so many claims about lumens that dont match what a meter shows is true output. Plus, shining a meter directly into light fixture is not true measure. Proper guides would test output at a certain set distance from fixture.
have a photo of these thousands of tractors cus google is failing meJohn Deere disagrees. They mount all of their lights at shoulder height. Never been a problem for me, or tens of thousands of other users.