Rotary Cutter Width

SDT

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multiple and various
Apr 15, 2018
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I have to take exception to a number of comments you make but rather than argue, I'll just leave your fantasy go.

Let me just say that with an 12 speed gearbox, there is always the right gear for whatever task.

Never be an HST in a big tractor, not practical from an efficient power transmission standpoint. CVT with a gearbox, yes. International tried the HST in a large frame utility ag tractor years ago and it was a failure. Above 75 horse flywheel, you'd be very hard pressed to find any.

For mowing lawns and fiddling around, I'd have one, for serious farming or haying, never.
Bingo, Flip.

I love all four of my HSTs but they are not well suited for some applications.

SDT
 

JimmyJazz

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B2601
Aug 8, 2020
1,098
644
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Pittsburgh, Pa
This is sound advice.
I bought a 72" light duty mower at Tractor Supply 6 years ago. Probably made in China. It continues to serve me well. I recommend the County Line brand. Once you have created your initial trail or whatever its maintenance thereafter. This requires a lot less "muscle". I could have spent a lot more money on a quality mower , however , in my opinion one must employ the same sound capital allocation decisions in the "country crafts" as elsewhere. Best of luck and have fun.
 
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jimr63

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Equipment
M5-091HDC, L47TLB, L4701F, ZD1211-72, GR2120-54, RTV-X1140
Jun 24, 2015
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47
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SOMD
I have to take exception to a number of comments you make but rather than argue, I'll just leave your fantasy go.

Let me just say that with an 12 speed gearbox, there is always the right gear for whatever task.

Never be an HST in a big tractor, not practical from an efficient power transmission standpoint. CVT with a gearbox, yes. International tried the HST in a large frame utility ag tractor years ago and it was a failure. Above 75 horse flywheel, you'd be very hard pressed to find any.

For mowing lawns and fiddling around, I'd have one, for serious farming or haying, never.
My JD 6620SH combine is HST and I'll take that any day over a gear driven combine. But I agree with your points about gear drives in large tractors, I like picking a gear and knowing I'm dragging a disc at a certain speed at rated rpm.
 

aaluck

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L4400HST, Bush Hog 276, RDTH60, Speeco PHD, etc
Oct 9, 2019
928
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Snowdoun, AL
I love all four of my HSTs but they are not well suited for some applications.
Just out of curiosity what are they not suited for?

We are talking about one of three methods to move the tractor forward or backward: gear, HST, SS. If you need to move your tractor forward and backward all three are well suited for that application.

I'm confused about the 'sides' claiming one is better than the other.
 

SDT

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Just out of curiosity what are they not suited for?

We are talking about one of three methods to move the tractor forward or backward: gear, HST, SS. If you need to move your tractor forward and backward all three are well suited for that application.

I'm confused about the 'sides' claiming one is better than the other.
HST transmissions are not well suited for ground engaging implements (tillage) due to inefficiency.

You will be fine plowing your garden once each year with your HST but you will find NO high HP AG tractors with HST transmissions.

Yes, I know, but construction equipment is a totally different market where HST transmissions are used for different reasons.

SDT
 

aaluck

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L4400HST, Bush Hog 276, RDTH60, Speeco PHD, etc
Oct 9, 2019
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Snowdoun, AL
HST transmissions are not well suited for ground engaging implements (tillage) due to inefficiency.
Interesting. I don't do 'farming' but I plow about 50 acres (total 6-7 fields) twice a year for deer fields and find no difference between the HST on my L4400 and my 1968 Massey....other then the brakes work on my L4400 and the disk IS my brake on the Massey.:oops:
 

BigG

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l2501, FEL, BB, Rotary cutter, rake,spreader, roller, etc. New Holland TL80 A
Sep 14, 2018
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It is funny how HST are painted with such a broad brush. The coal haulers in the mine where my dad worked were all HST. At 110 tons of payload per load they were more cost effective then the conventional geared trucks. This was back in the late 1960s and early 1970s. I do not know but I am willing to bet that 110 tons of payload on an off-road tractor trailer rig on dirt roads in the middle of the winter in southern Ohio pulls pretty hard. Just a guess.


 
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SDT

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Interesting. I don't do 'farming' but I plow about 50 acres (total 6-7 fields) twice a year for deer fields and find no difference between the HST on my L4400 and my 1968 Massey....other then the brakes work on my L4400 and the disk IS my brake on the Massey.:oops:
Key word is efficiency.

Drawbar HP is considerably less with a HST transmission than with a gear transmission, all else equal. So is efficiency.

It's a cost of operation (fuel) issue.

FWIW: ABB (might have been MAN, can't remember) tried to market HST locomotives in the US in the 60s but failed miserably due to cost of operation vis a vis diesel electric. It had nothing to do with "pull[ing]."

SDT
 

NCL4701

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L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
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I’ve never posted on a HST v gear or tire v tire thread and I may regret this, but...

I like my Kubota. Grew up on a farm driving nothing but gear drive, non-shuttle, 2wd, R1’s. I don’t do that now. I’m not a farmer and don’t care to be. At the rate I’m going so far I only put about 200hr/yr on my tractor. But I have some acreage to care for and I need something to do it with. A 75hp tractor wouldn’t fit on the relatively narrow sidesloped trails down the almost sheer drops into the creek bottom and wouldn’t fit in the orchard areas that have to be brushogged. A small B wouldn’t have the PTO HP to run my chipper or drawbar HP or weight to skid logs up the steep trails out of the bottoms. I don’t do tillage work. My tractor has cruise control; tried it once on the road driving to a friend’s house to do some grapple and chipper work. Don’t have a field big enough to use it otherwise. I don’t do ag type spraying so precise speed control is unimportant. PTO HP on HST v gear in the L4701 is less than 2hp, but gear is more efficient. Maybe gear drive would give me more drawbar HP, but so far in low range I’ve always run out of traction before I ran out of torque so I’d need to change tires before I could blame the transmission. So far as drawbar HP at tillage speed; again I don’t do tillage so I don’t care. The R4’s are better for about 95% of what I do as they don’t tear up the ground like R1’s. For the other 5% what I really need to do is get a small dozer.

We all have problems we address with equipment. Our problems aren’t the same so it makes sense our equipment isn’t the same. I really do like my open station L4701 HST with loaded R4’s for my needs but I wouldn’t recommend it for a lawn mower, or chisel plowing a 200 acre field, or running a baler in a serious hay operation, or blowing snow in sub-zero temps. Conversely I have no use at all for a 19hp tractor or a 90hp tractor or anything with a cab. Nothing wrong with them, there’s just nothing I need that they could do.
 
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SDT

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I’ve never posted on a HST v gear or tire v tire thread and I may regret this, but...

I like my Kubota. Grew up on a farm driving nothing but gear drive, non-shuttle, 2wd, R1’s. I don’t do that now. I’m not a farmer and don’t care to be. At the rate I’m going so far I only put about 200hr/yr on my tractor. But I have some acreage to care for and I need something to do it with. A 75hp tractor wouldn’t fit on the relatively narrow sidesloped trails down the almost sheer drops into the creek bottom and wouldn’t fit in the orchard areas that have to be brushogged. A small B wouldn’t have the PTO HP to run my chipper or drawbar HP or weight to skid logs up the steep trails out of the bottoms. I don’t do tillage work. My tractor has cruise control; tried it once on the road driving to a friend’s house to do some grapple and chipper work. Don’t have a field big enough to use it otherwise. I don’t do ag type spraying so precise speed control is unimportant. PTO HP on HST v gear in the L4701 is less than 2hp, but gear is more efficient. Maybe gear drive would give me more drawbar HP, but so far in low range I’ve always run out of traction before I ran out of torque so I’d need to change tires before I could blame the transmission. So far as drawbar HP at tillage speed; again I don’t do tillage so I don’t care. The R4’s are better for about 95% of what I do as they don’t tear up the ground like R1’s. For the other 5% what I really need to do is get a small dozer.

We all have problems we address with equipment. Our problems aren’t the same so it makes sense our equipment isn’t the same. I really do like my open station L4701 HST with loaded R4’s for my needs but I wouldn’t recommend it for a lawn mower, or chisel plowing a 200 acre field, or running a baler in a serious hay operation, or blowing snow in sub-zero temps. Conversely I have no use at all for a 19hp tractor or a 90hp tractor or anything with a cab. Nothing wrong with them, there’s just nothing I need that they could do.
Well said.

HST transmissions are wonderfully convenient, and I love all 4 of mine but they are not well suited to tillage type work due to efficiencies, which is why they are not used in high HP AG tractors.

No, I have never said that one cannot plow with a HST.

SDT
 
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dochsml

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L4701HST
Jan 21, 2020
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I like my HST for doing loader work. I have an 11 acre obstacle course. If it was a 200 acre open field, I would have a bigger tractor that was gear.
 
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