I never heard the engine rpm decrease at set speed when the tractor determined that there was no load. It is supposed to maintain lowest eng. speed to maintain set speed.
everything is fully automatic . when you push the throttle to high it throttles back by itself to about 1200 rpm 's .it only goes high rpm when the tractor needs it
The Fendt is definitely better on the stick, check out a “how to drive a fendt” video or something. Its just so intuitive having it on the big joy stick. You can select forward or reverse by pulling a trigger on the stick and moving it forward or back. If you pull out on a road and want to accelerate up to full speed just knock the stick to the right and the tractor will do the rest, and if you are on silage say alongside a chopper then you can increase the speed in 2kmh increments by tapping the stick forward or pull back to slow down. The stick is sprung so always returns to centre and you also have all the hydraulic spool controls on it to
@@danhopkinson2811 im going to say that its more complicated than jd, but like after maybe 50 hours i could drive it without looking at the stick. it might just be that ive always driven valtra and john deere, but every tractor has its own sides
Its not complicated, i’ve spent plenty of time on Deeres but on the direct drive models. Find them gutless especially when pulling silage trailers. The Fendt is easy because you can do everything on the one stick. You could drive it completely pedal free if you wanted