Question:

Why the front wheel of tracter is smaller than rear wheel?

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automobile

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  1. On older tractors, the rear tires -- the drive wheels -- provide power and traction, while the front tires are for steering.

    Contrary to popular belief, large-diameter drive tires actually provide less torque and pulling power because the axle has less leverage, and the mass of the tire is greater, which requires more power to overcome its inertia. But large tires have greater surface area and contact with the ground, increasing their traction. Furthermore, because of their increased surface area, wide tires are less likely to sink into soft ground.

    On four-wheel-drive tractors, the front wheels are generally the same size as the rear tires, and generally all four wheels steer.

    The mechanical advantage or gear ratio is a function of the transmission.

    For the tractors I have, I put water/antifreeze in the tires for greater weight. The front tires are smaller, and are easier to stear, take up less room, and are cheaper. Modern tractors with large front tires are almost always 4WD.

    Larger tires give the tractor more ground clearance. Front tires on older tractors didn't need to be driven, so the could be smaller and thus cheaper. As 4 wheel drive came about, the front wheels still needed the ability to steer, so their drive mechanisms also had accomodate the "swivel" of the wheels and could be engineered to "reach down" to the wheels rather than use the centered drive shaft like the rear wheels. You may notice that rear wheels are also typically smaller if they steer independently on some types of equipment, and front wheels are larger if they do not steer as in an articulating vehicle.


  2. makes it easier to turn

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