5030
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 28,964
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
like I said.....'Things must be different in Norway'.....
Possibly but do you want your tractor running continuously to power a generator? Would not a dedicated generator work better?
I ask because I have had to go four days without power in an ice storm.
Plan on needing roughly 2HP/KW.
You list 2 tractors, an 1860 and a 25D. The 25D might just manage it.
The advantages of a PTO generator is that there is no engine to maintain, you don't need to run it a bit for maintenance, they are relatively small and you can easily swap the engine.
Plus sometimes you can get them cheap. A few years ago I bought a 12KW Winco, barely used WITH a nice PTO shaft (also barely used) for $600. Looking at todays prices a 10KW Winco w/ PTO would be about $1700.
If you only need 8KW and you DON'T have a generator I'd recommend a dual or tri-fuel and run it off NG or LPG, or go big time and get a military surplus 10 to 15KW diesel genset on a trailer.
Soo can I run a big generator with a light load powered by a BX?
That's news to me. I have 2 large frame Kubota's (much larger than most owners on here have) and neither have a 'governor' that maintains engine rpm during load fluctuations on the PTO. In order for any engine to maintain a specific RPM loaded and unloaded they must have a load sensing fuel pump. Tractors don't.
Maybe things are different in Norway.
Are you running your tractor at PTO RPM or are you using a higher pto gear and running the engine slower to get the correct pto speed?? ... If the former you have a warranty issue with your tractor. Some tractors hold rpm better than others as load changes, but at pto rated rpm there are none as bad as you describe unless they are malfunctioning.It's actually called torque rise in a diesel engine, the ability for an engine to mantain a pre-determined rpm at a particular throttle setting. What I'm inferring to is when you exceed the torque rise of an engine (when you apply a load greater than the specified torque rise) you have to adjust the throttle accordingly.
No matter, I've owned and operated a PTO driven unit and it's no picnic for the reasons I described in a previous post.