As far as the mathmetical part of it,the distance of travel of the blades at a given RPM vs the speed that you are moving forward somehow would determine the speed at which you would overrun the blades. I'm no mathmetician so I don't know how you'd figure it. The Deere dealer told me one time though that with a disc mower type of a mower conditioner,given the length of the knife,diameter of the drum and speed of rotation,you would have to run 22 MPH to overrun the knives. So simple answer,whatever the power,field conditions and quality of the cut will allow since you're not likely gonna go fast enough to overrun them on the brushhog.
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Today's Featured Article - 12-Volt Conversions for 4-Cylinder Ford 2000 & 4000 Tractors - by Tommy Duvall. After two summers of having to park my old 1964 model 4000 gas 4 cyl. on a hill just in case the 6 volt system, for whatever reason, would not crank her, I decided to try the 12 volt conversion. After some research of convert or not, I decided to go ahead, the main reason being that this tractor was a working tractor, not a show tractor (yet). I did keep everything I replaced for the day I do want to restore her to showroom condition.
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1964 I-H 140 tractor with cultivators and sidedresser. Starts and runs good. Asking 2650. CALL RON AT 502-319-1952
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