Soundguy
Old Timer
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2002
- Messages
- 51,575
- Location
- Central florida
- Tractor
- RK 55HC,ym1700, NH7610S, Ford 8N, 2N, NAA, 660, 850 x2, 541, 950, 941D, 951, 2000, 3000, 4000, 4600, 5000, 740, IH 'C' 'H', CUB, John Deere 'B', allis 'G', case VAC
. It's slow, won't lift much, and pretty limited overall. The 8n was not designed to carry a loader and I wouldn't consider it a very good one for that job either.
Those are all objective terms.
'speed' will be a function of flow.
strength will be a function of PSI and cyl crossectional size, but not flow.
A front stinger pump is easily fit to the N, and is in fact the prefered method of loader powering, vs the built in belly-pump.
A high gpm pump in the teens ont he front will produce a modern loader 'speed' of lift/dump/curl.
if the loader cyl's are of similar size to a modern laoder, and you select a common pump that was built around the ~2500 PSI pressure that many ag applicatrions run, then the laoder lift capability will be similar to a modern one.
All that said.. the kingpin on the front does not like to stand up to constant abuse. It will take it.. but at cost. I know guys that move large round bales ont he front of an 8n with aheavilly ballasted rear, and a full hyd post and subframe style loader..
I personally wouldn't try it on anything smaller than an 00 series.. but I've seen it done plenty of times ( as well as picking up a bale on the rear lift after 3p geometry was changed using a blue-axe ).. etc.
soundguy