Cidertom
Gold Member
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2005
- Messages
- 478
- Location
- Benton Co Oregon
- Tractor
- JD 4520, 2305 Aktive snow-trac ST4
I'll weigh in with the following comments (your mileage may vary, Professional operator in a closed sandbox etc)
One issue I am finding going from my 4300 to the 4520: Torque. With the hp already up against the cat 1 -cat 2 boundary, finding stuff that is as strong as the tractor can dish out is becoming an issue. So far I have managed to: Pull apart a decent rear blade, snap a tow bridle when the drag harrow hung up, bend the moldboard in a box scraper when I found a stump that had been cut flush. 4520 with filled R4 tires takes a lot to stop it, I wasn't using speed and inertia to do these things, I just didn't notice that parts of the setup were still going while others were stopped.
If I didn't do so much pallet/ forklift work, I would ditch the 400CX. While the rollback doesn't seem that much different, the effective rollback is a lot less. With a typical FEL as you lift the effective roll back increases as the load is lifted, with the 400CX you stay the same. So loads that I could get to stay put in the old bucket now tend to dribble out with the CX. Of course the old rig would not have lifted 2800 lb concrete culverts either.
If our plan had not been to get a second smaller (2520 etc) tractor, I would have stayed with the 3000 series. I'm going to have a tractor that is too big and one that is too small.
One issue I am finding going from my 4300 to the 4520: Torque. With the hp already up against the cat 1 -cat 2 boundary, finding stuff that is as strong as the tractor can dish out is becoming an issue. So far I have managed to: Pull apart a decent rear blade, snap a tow bridle when the drag harrow hung up, bend the moldboard in a box scraper when I found a stump that had been cut flush. 4520 with filled R4 tires takes a lot to stop it, I wasn't using speed and inertia to do these things, I just didn't notice that parts of the setup were still going while others were stopped.
If I didn't do so much pallet/ forklift work, I would ditch the 400CX. While the rollback doesn't seem that much different, the effective rollback is a lot less. With a typical FEL as you lift the effective roll back increases as the load is lifted, with the 400CX you stay the same. So loads that I could get to stay put in the old bucket now tend to dribble out with the CX. Of course the old rig would not have lifted 2800 lb concrete culverts either.
If our plan had not been to get a second smaller (2520 etc) tractor, I would have stayed with the 3000 series. I'm going to have a tractor that is too big and one that is too small.