banner



How To Read Hour Meter 1/10

Hey guys,
This might sound like a impaired question but does the hr meter on a new tractor (B26) actually hateful i our of time on your watch or is the 60 minutes on a tractor meter dissimilar? For case...is fifty.ii to l.3 on the meter actually 6 minutes? You would recall that it is just my meter takes longer than that. And so, is my meter malfunctioning or is there a departure? Thanks.:)

My older B7100 hour meter works just as you stated, multiply the white digit on the left by six and that is the minutes into the hr, example : 4 x vi = 24 minutes. Mine is dead on with a regular clock.

My understanding of a tractor 60 minutes meter is that it shows 1 hour of use when the tractor runs 1 60 minutes at the tractors rated rpm. Alot of Kubotas have a rating at nigh 2600 rpm only it does vary some from model to model. To give you a instance, information technology would take two hours of engine running time at a high idle of 1300 rpms to put one hour on the meter for a engine rated at 2600 rpm.

They all should be the same. That's engine running time. Each i/10 of an hr is vi minutes. Unless you are a Lawyer then it adds up to nigh xx minutes of charging time....:rolleyes:

At that place are two kinds of hour meters. One blazon just records fourth dimension exactly like a clock when the key is on. The other type commonly called a HOBBS meter records fourth dimension based on engine RPM. Typically 1 hour would egual one hour of time at what ever RPM equates to 550 power take of rpm. If running at 225 power accept off rpm that would equal xxx minutes. I do not know what type the B26 has. I suspect it but records time with the key on.

I have never personally witnessed a "PTO" hour meter, just from discussions here, I'k convinced they exist. I accept no inkling where the break point is where the regular-hour hour meter matters less and the PTO-hr hour meter matters more, but a general statement is that larger equipment measures the hour past PTO revolutions equally stated. I am sure my BX measures an 60 minutes by time...regular hours.

It probably stems from authentic service intervals for larger equipment. If it is equipment that spends a certain amount of its life idling or puttering around off idle, it would greatly increment your service intervals (accept them be farther apart) to have the "hour" measured off of engine rpm's rather than past an hour's time. And so if I made something of a gauge, the "agrictultural", "contruction" or "working" machines...the L, the M, the TLB B serial (B26, not the tractor B) would have an rpm type guess.

Us regular folks with the smaller tractors get regular hour blazon stuff. Information technology takes forever plenty to get 100 hours on my machine...if information technology was measured by engine or PTO RPM, it would have 3 years for me to change the oil, for goodness sake.

Taking the question a footling dissimilar management. Does anyone know if the BX2350 hour meter increases if the Primal is simply on or does it simply increase when the engine is running? I had a riding backyard mower click off forty hrs earlier I noticed the central was accidently left on.

Thanks,
Steve

Hey guys,
I think the mystery is solved. I called the dealer and he had no clue. So, here is what I did...I took a stop watch and I measured an interval from 68.9 to 70.0 at idle (virtually 900-1000 rpm). Information technology took thirteen min 40 sec. I and so measured the time between lxx.0 and 70.1 at about 2500 rpm (540 pto on the estimate). It took exactly 6 minutes. So the B26, which does not have the electronic nuance like an L39 must have a meter that runs off of rpm. Of form, this will probably all change side by side time I try to measure it...or maybe my stopwatch is broken.:p Thanks for the input!

Well gee I was wrong on that one. I would take expected all of them to be engine on time no matter what RPM. I volition have to come across what my Kubota does

steverichmond said:

Does anyone know if the BX2350 hour meter increases if the Key is simply on...

I was in a real bind for light one evening and my only choice at the time was to use my tractor'southward headlights. To turn them on, the key must be rolled all the mode to the "run" position. As such, the hr meter was definitely rolling. Burned an hr off the 'life' of my tractor that night.

And so I am 99.half dozen% sure that the BX 60 minutes meter...at to the lowest degree on my BX2230...measures a true hour regardless of engine RPM. I would look that to be truthful across the BX line. And given the earlier example, it makes sense. I would await that to be the example in their ZTR's and smaller mowers besides. Not certain most the B tractors. Makes sense that the B26 is an rpm measuring type given the construction environment it was designed to operate in.

Source: https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/threads/hour-meter.120788/

0 Response to "How To Read Hour Meter 1/10"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel