LD1
Epic Contributor
Well then the issue isnt really needing to know what you can and cannot lift with various front attachments. Because the loader only has so much power.
The issue is how to make the tractor SAFE.....while using the loader to its fullest potential. Because IF the front end loader can lift something....no matter with forks or bucket.....you want it to be safe. So just how much weight you are "actually" lifting is irrelevant....if the loader will lift it, its within the capacity of the machine if properly ballasted.
Since I have the same tractor (just an older version).....I have TWO ballasts that both allow full use of the loader. Simply meaning the loader is no where close to strong enough to make the tractor feel un-stable with either of them on. And those two ballasts are
#1.....A 1250# rear blade (your rear blade....if it is insufficient....isnt heavy enough
#2....A 1620# rotary cutter
My rear blade has its weight balanced about 3' behind the pins. And the cutter is about 2' back. (If I take the loader off, I can do one heck of a wheelie with either)
Using my above math.....with the ball ends being 2.67' behind the rear axle....
The 1250# blade gives 7087 lb-ft of counter ballast effect about the rear axle
The 1610# cutter gives 8323 lf-ft
For equal effect.....keeping a ballast box centered 1' behind the pins would require somewhere around 2000#
I also have loaded tires and wheel weights. Though I can take the wheel weights off and feel just as stable with either of the above implements. And while fluid in the tires is ballast....and does help....it doesnt shift any weight off the front axle to give a counter balance effect.
Also worth noting that at one time I had a 1000# 6' cutter with its load center 3' back. The way it felt....I would consider that the bare minimum if you plan on working the loader to its fullest potential. That math says 5670 lb-ft.....or at a minimum 1500# centered 1' behind the pins.
I also have a 1200# 55gal drum filled with concrete ~1000#. It has a 2" square tube and it slips in the trailer mover (so the leading edge of the barrel is ~6" behind the 3ph pins). Which puts its weight center at 1.25' behind the pins. That yields 3920 lb-ft of ballast effect. And can definitively tell you it isnt enough for the MX.
Alot to digest.....but basically......a 55gal barrel of concrete if kept in tight is simply not enough.You either need more weight or weight further back.
Try to get to something in the 7000lb-ft range. Work the math backwards based on how you design a box (how far back it sits) and see how heavy you need to get it.
The issue is how to make the tractor SAFE.....while using the loader to its fullest potential. Because IF the front end loader can lift something....no matter with forks or bucket.....you want it to be safe. So just how much weight you are "actually" lifting is irrelevant....if the loader will lift it, its within the capacity of the machine if properly ballasted.
Since I have the same tractor (just an older version).....I have TWO ballasts that both allow full use of the loader. Simply meaning the loader is no where close to strong enough to make the tractor feel un-stable with either of them on. And those two ballasts are
#1.....A 1250# rear blade (your rear blade....if it is insufficient....isnt heavy enough
#2....A 1620# rotary cutter
My rear blade has its weight balanced about 3' behind the pins. And the cutter is about 2' back. (If I take the loader off, I can do one heck of a wheelie with either)
Using my above math.....with the ball ends being 2.67' behind the rear axle....
The 1250# blade gives 7087 lb-ft of counter ballast effect about the rear axle
The 1610# cutter gives 8323 lf-ft
For equal effect.....keeping a ballast box centered 1' behind the pins would require somewhere around 2000#
I also have loaded tires and wheel weights. Though I can take the wheel weights off and feel just as stable with either of the above implements. And while fluid in the tires is ballast....and does help....it doesnt shift any weight off the front axle to give a counter balance effect.
Also worth noting that at one time I had a 1000# 6' cutter with its load center 3' back. The way it felt....I would consider that the bare minimum if you plan on working the loader to its fullest potential. That math says 5670 lb-ft.....or at a minimum 1500# centered 1' behind the pins.
I also have a 1200# 55gal drum filled with concrete ~1000#. It has a 2" square tube and it slips in the trailer mover (so the leading edge of the barrel is ~6" behind the 3ph pins). Which puts its weight center at 1.25' behind the pins. That yields 3920 lb-ft of ballast effect. And can definitively tell you it isnt enough for the MX.
Alot to digest.....but basically......a 55gal barrel of concrete if kept in tight is simply not enough.You either need more weight or weight further back.
Try to get to something in the 7000lb-ft range. Work the math backwards based on how you design a box (how far back it sits) and see how heavy you need to get it.