JWR
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,980
- Location
- So MD / WV
- Tractor
- MF 2660 LP, 3 Kubota B2150, Kubota BX2200, MH Pacer, Gravely 5660, etc.
The impetus for this post/thread is that I think FEL buyers/users would be much better informed if data were available regarding the torsion and rotational load capacity of the FELs on the market.
Loaders get used for SO many things, whether appropriate or not, and a lot of people shopping for tractors see the loader as a very large part of their use and application. So there really should be specs on torsion. How much off center load will it handle producing how much angular deflection in the loader frame ? What is the max allowable ? What is the point of no return where a twist becomes a permanent disfigurement until repaired? It would be much improved insight into the tractor/loader capability to see those stats and to see them tested.
There is extensive data regarding lift capacity,height, breakout force, etc. but nothing I have ever found regarding off-center load capacity, torque about the fore-aft axis of the tractor, and related data. None of the common brands of tractors provide this data in their literature that I can find. The nations foremost tractor testing lab at the Univ. of Nebraska was confirmed a year or two ago as not doing testing on loader torque capacity or characteristics.
Certainly vertical-axis-only data is SO much easier to collect, measure and document than rotation and off-center data. That does not make the torsion data any less important ! I have bent my FEL on a MF 2660 and I am certain many people have bent or "spindled" their loaders too. Some of these incidents are minor (easily undone) while others break welds and create permanent damage. My abusive behavior involved prying out a locust tree stump with one corner of the bucket while using full-power and 4WD to accentuate the lift. There are obviously many ways to do it.
Aside from the lift specs buyers just don't have much to go on. The skid steer compatible interfaces (SSQA) that are slowly/surely dominating the market make torsional data even more important than ever. For example my MF SSQA works fine but won't stand much if you happen to hook one side of a heavy bucket or other attachment. I bent my left/right SSQA interconnect bar beyond redemption once.
I worked with standards organization in the aerospace test data processing business for decades. Standards would become the immediate issue if this ball ever gets rolling on FEL torsion. Otherwise each mfr could/would provide a baffling and often conflicting variety of specs/data unless there are at least a few basics expected to meet a standard set of specs.
The mfrs will be extremely reluctant to provide FEL torsion data because there is not yet a standard, because the complexity of testing is much greater than for straight-line vertical loads, and because they do not want to be put on the witness stand either in front of us or their competitors. I think a GREAT start to all this would be to talk the Nebraska tractor testing lab into suggesting a DRAFT standard and going to industry/consumers for comment. There is probably an AG industry engineering organization that should at least comment if not become involved.
While we are at it, consumers would be well-served by more info on the true origins of the loaders they buy. I have heard that many if not most of the big name tractors (Massey, Deere, New Holland, etc.) actually have their loaders made by third party subcontractors. So more shared info on the loader manufacturer industry would be a good thing in my view.
Loaders get used for SO many things, whether appropriate or not, and a lot of people shopping for tractors see the loader as a very large part of their use and application. So there really should be specs on torsion. How much off center load will it handle producing how much angular deflection in the loader frame ? What is the max allowable ? What is the point of no return where a twist becomes a permanent disfigurement until repaired? It would be much improved insight into the tractor/loader capability to see those stats and to see them tested.
There is extensive data regarding lift capacity,height, breakout force, etc. but nothing I have ever found regarding off-center load capacity, torque about the fore-aft axis of the tractor, and related data. None of the common brands of tractors provide this data in their literature that I can find. The nations foremost tractor testing lab at the Univ. of Nebraska was confirmed a year or two ago as not doing testing on loader torque capacity or characteristics.
Certainly vertical-axis-only data is SO much easier to collect, measure and document than rotation and off-center data. That does not make the torsion data any less important ! I have bent my FEL on a MF 2660 and I am certain many people have bent or "spindled" their loaders too. Some of these incidents are minor (easily undone) while others break welds and create permanent damage. My abusive behavior involved prying out a locust tree stump with one corner of the bucket while using full-power and 4WD to accentuate the lift. There are obviously many ways to do it.
Aside from the lift specs buyers just don't have much to go on. The skid steer compatible interfaces (SSQA) that are slowly/surely dominating the market make torsional data even more important than ever. For example my MF SSQA works fine but won't stand much if you happen to hook one side of a heavy bucket or other attachment. I bent my left/right SSQA interconnect bar beyond redemption once.
I worked with standards organization in the aerospace test data processing business for decades. Standards would become the immediate issue if this ball ever gets rolling on FEL torsion. Otherwise each mfr could/would provide a baffling and often conflicting variety of specs/data unless there are at least a few basics expected to meet a standard set of specs.
The mfrs will be extremely reluctant to provide FEL torsion data because there is not yet a standard, because the complexity of testing is much greater than for straight-line vertical loads, and because they do not want to be put on the witness stand either in front of us or their competitors. I think a GREAT start to all this would be to talk the Nebraska tractor testing lab into suggesting a DRAFT standard and going to industry/consumers for comment. There is probably an AG industry engineering organization that should at least comment if not become involved.
While we are at it, consumers would be well-served by more info on the true origins of the loaders they buy. I have heard that many if not most of the big name tractors (Massey, Deere, New Holland, etc.) actually have their loaders made by third party subcontractors. So more shared info on the loader manufacturer industry would be a good thing in my view.