T-800 (T-75.01) is a super-heavy caterpillar tractor for operation as part of a bulldozer-cultivating unit manufactured by the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant . The largest tractor manufactured in Europe [1] .
| T-800 | |
|---|---|
| Produced, years. | 1983 - present time |
| Manufacturer | Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant |
| Instances | 10 |
| Appointment | Bulldozer for energy-intensive work |
| Propulsion type | crawler |
| Traction class , tf | 75 |
| Transport speed, km / h | forward 14 back 17 |
| Gross weight, t | 103 |
| Location | |
| Cabin | sealed with a circular view, noise-insulated, air-conditioned |
| Engine | front |
| Main dimensions | |
| Length mm | 7945/12400 (full with the blade down) |
| Width mm | 4185/6000 |
| Height mm | 4250 |
| Road (agrotechnical) clearance, mm | 472 |
| Engine | |
| Engine make | 6DM-21T |
| Horsepower (kW) | 820 (603) |
| Transmission | |
| Type of transmission | hydromechanical |
| Number of gears forward / reverse | 4-front 2-rear |
| Suspension and steering | |
| Suspension type | elastic |
| Turn Control Method | separate track drive |
| Equipment | |
| Hydraulic equipment | separate aggregate system |
The first tractor was assembled in 1983 [2] , a total of ten machines [3] were produced. Designed for energy-intensive overburden operations in the mining industry, to perform large amounts of earthwork in road and land reclamation construction. Nominal traction force - 75 tons, maximum - 140 tons. Engine power - 820 hp The total mass of the tractor with bulldozer-ripping equipment is 103 tons, 30 tons of which are the mass of equipment. Two types of caterpillars were used: for rocky soil weighing 6 tons and wider for loam weighing 8 tons.
Notes
- ↑ T-75.01 (T-800) bulldozer-ripper aggregate . Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant . Archived March 21, 2012.
- ↑ June 1 marks the 75th anniversary of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant! . ChTZ-Service Group of Companies (May 29, 2008). Archived March 21, 2012.
- ↑ South African, Indian and Tajik companies are ready to buy eight T-800 super-tractors from ChTZ // uralpress.ru (Retrieved February 3, 2010)