[AT] Tractor safety

Indiana Robinson robinson46176 at gmail.com
Mon Sep 2 11:06:23 PDT 2019


I still have a John Deere A and while I was still farming my last primary
tillage tractor was a Deere 4020. Both were narrow front with Roll-a-matic.
I often wondered if the Roll-a-matic would have an effect on side stability
even if extremely minor. If, say the tractor was leaning down hill to the
right  the down hill tire would be able to lift and at the same time the up
hill tire would be pushing down placing a slight lift to the up hill side.
Minor I know but when nearing the actual tip point you can about push one
over with one hand. The NF on that 4020 was about 2' wide.
All of my other NF's (AC-C, WC, Farmall's, Case, MM etc.) are all rigid as
you would expect.


.

On Mon, Sep 2, 2019 at 12:21 PM James Peck <jamesgpeck at hotmail.com> wrote:

> My childhood friend turned over a NF JD A in his early teens while plowing
> on flat ground. The issue was turning too fast. It went on its side but did
> not roll over.
>
> [szabelski at wildblue.net] Under identical conditions, and with the same
> rear wheel spacing and weight distribution, identical WFE and NFE tractors
> will have different roll over characteristics. The reason is that in order
> for a tractor to roll over there has to be a rotational moment applied. The
> rotational moment occurs as one of the rear wheels comes off of the ground.
>
> Now consider a man standing on two legs and somebody pushes him from the
> side at his shoulder. At the time of the push a rotational moment is being
> applied to his shoulder, trying to tip him over. One of his feet may come
> off of the ground, but he should be able to stay standing.
>
> Now consider the same man standing on one leg and the same push is applied
> to his shoulder. He’s going to have a harder time staying upright.
>
> If you could find some people who would be willing to test their tractors
> on a tilt bed, and who had the necessary parts to change their WFE to a NFE
> (I know that older Farmalls can be switched between WFE and NFE with some
> simple bolting work) you could get all the data you need to put this issue
> to bed.
>
> You could attach strain gauges to the safety chains/cables of the test bed
> and determine the amount of rotational moment it takes to cause a specific
> tractor to roll. It would be nice to get a variety of tractor types and
> sizes to see how tractor manufacturer/size affects the the rolling over
> concern.
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-- 
-- 

Francis Robinson
aka "farmer"
Central Indiana USA
robinson46176 at gmail.com
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