If you've ever watched Millennial Farmer most of his farm is heavy soil and requires a lot of HP to pull tillage equipment through it, but his newest plot of land is much lighter and can be tilled when the rest of his farm is too wet.Īs for trailers, on the farm we had grain trailers that were rated for 30 tons. For example sandy soil is easier to work with than clay. IRL an implement won't say it specifically needs 200hp to pull it, but rather an average depending on the type of ground you have. When the implements in the ground a certain amount of addition drag is created which equals the HP listed to pull the implement. A 30ton tractor with a 10 ton implement require a certain amount of HP just to move. Thats my guess, mass has always been a thing but it looks like they’re going to show it now and make it a little more pronounced. There’s other factors at play but the point is all the horsepower in the world doesn’t mean a whole lot if you can’t put it to the ground. I outweigh the tw by 1000ish pounds but he overpowers me by 30ish horse. A less dramatic explanation is a tw Ford tractor a relative of mine owns maxes out pulling a certain piece of tillage equipment that I can pull without too much issue in the same conditions. As an example my gmc pickup with a duramax has 450 horsepower my little challenger tractor has 130 I would be hard pressed to chisel plow with my pickup which weighs in about 10,000 less pounds. I would guess they implemented it like real life. If it's showing the weight of the tractor, and not towing capacity, what do we do with that information? For a trailer, is it the max weight the trailer can hold, or the weight of the trailer when empty. Does anybody know what the weight means in the store? For a tractor, is it showing the weight it can tow, or is it the weight of the tractor.
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