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Cattle Boards
Trucks, Tractors & Machinery
How to find hydraulic flow rate on a tractor?
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<blockquote data-quote="Nesikep" data-source="post: 1533195" data-attributes="member: 9096"><p>I know that both masseys and IH's kept the same platform for years, and through many models and power ranges.. transmissions on masseys are pretty much the same from the 0 series at least through the 200 series.. some minor changes like wet/dry brake setups.. IH's had the same transmissions in the 40-80hp range in the 1970's and 80's.. tractors got a little smaller/shorter with smaller wheels and 3 cylinder instead of 4 cylinder engines, but the rest of it really didn't change all that much. This means the smaller tractors have darned near indestructible transmissions but they get a little more fragile on some of the bigger ones.. Massey 185's were known to be a little weak because of the power they put down and big huge rear tires and weights that provided traction</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nesikep, post: 1533195, member: 9096"] I know that both masseys and IH's kept the same platform for years, and through many models and power ranges.. transmissions on masseys are pretty much the same from the 0 series at least through the 200 series.. some minor changes like wet/dry brake setups.. IH's had the same transmissions in the 40-80hp range in the 1970's and 80's.. tractors got a little smaller/shorter with smaller wheels and 3 cylinder instead of 4 cylinder engines, but the rest of it really didn't change all that much. This means the smaller tractors have darned near indestructible transmissions but they get a little more fragile on some of the bigger ones.. Massey 185's were known to be a little weak because of the power they put down and big huge rear tires and weights that provided traction [/QUOTE]
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How to find hydraulic flow rate on a tractor?
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