8,000 Lbs./Ft

I assume it’s a 110 Case? Isn’t there Peerless that’s bigger than a 110? I always wondered how much of a load one of them could pull. It looks like 24 bottoms was soaking up every pony it had. The front end even looked light. This fall I watched a 110 pull a 12 bottom plow right along at a good clip but I didn’t realize it could pull twice that amount of bottoms.
 
"8,000 Lbs./Ft"

WHERE are we measuring that?

Engine crankshaft?

At the drive wheels???
 
Who knows?

Just repeating what was reported by the owner and included in the comments.

Dean
 
Thats the new 150 horse Case. Amazing piece of work. I hope they take it on the road so i can see it in person. The 110 horse at Old Threshers is massive and I've seen a picture of the 150 dwarfing the 110.
AaronSEIA
 
So.for those that do not know, like me....
Why is there a "plowman" ready to do something with each plow?
Not a farmer so maybe that last word should be "share" ?
Nor do I know what the levers are going to do, raise and lower?

And if that tractor could be properly fitted with modern tires, would it be able to pull more bottoms?
 
Each "plowman" puts 2 bottoms in the ground with the lever...at the end of the round he lifts the two plow bottoms out of the ground with the
lever. Before self raising plows.
 
(quoted from post at 05:53:41 10/21/18) Thats the new 150 horse Case. Amazing piece of work. I hope they take it on the road so i can see it in person. The 110 horse at Old Threshers is massive and I've seen a picture of the 150 dwarfing the 110.
AaronSEIA

It is amazing. My wife and I went to see it. And yea, sitting side by side the 110 is tiny.

I believe because of it's size that it will be at the Rollag MN https://rollag.com/ next Sep then will return to SD. According to everything I've heard there are no current plans to tour with it. When loaded it's tall with the tractor being just over 13 feet on the ground plus it has to have oversize load permits to move it even with the wheel extensions removed.

Rick
 
(quoted from post at 06:27:00 10/21/18) "8,000 Lbs./Ft"

WHERE are we measuring that?

Engine crankshaft?

At the drive wheels???

No dynomometer exists to measure that much power. It's a formula driven, mathematical calculation.
 
I would certainly say there are. Old Threshers has a couple, but I don't know how big they get. When the 110 and 150 horse Cases were made, they had equipment to figure the power.
AaronSEIA
 
(quoted from post at 14:44:16 10/21/18)
(quoted from post at 06:27:00 10/21/18) "8,000 Lbs./Ft"

WHERE are we measuring that?

Engine crankshaft?

At the drive wheels???

No dynomometer exists to measure that much power. It's a formula driven, mathematical calculation.

How can you say that without knowing what 8000lbs/ft of what is?
 

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