JCB Fastrac Two chews up the miles (and fields)
JCB Fastrac Two's imposing size is matched by amazing speed
Underbody aerodynamics features a largely flat floor, although the exhaust pokes through it, too. At the back, there’s a wide diffuser, made from aluminium, to reduce and balance lift front to rear. Plus a parachute.
Front bodywork directs air around the front wheels and along the edge of the engine cowling to aid cooling but also houses the cooling tank, into which 25kg of ice is placed before each record run to cool air passing through the intercooler.
Vast water-to-air intercooler is located between a huge turbocharger and the air intake plenum. Inlet air that has been through the turbo might reach temperatures of 280deg C. After it has been through the intercooler, that can be down to 10deg C.
GKN makes tractor wheels for JCB but a regular Fastrac usually uses bigger ones than this. These are machined and welded to far tighter tolerance than normal tractor wheels and the tyres need balance weights, too. Imagine the steering wheel shake otherwise.
Of the four intake ducts, the big one is the main engine air intake and to its right one for an electric supercharger. The bottom two provide air cooling for an engine torsion damper and the exhaust respectively.
To improve aerodynamics, the Fastrac Two sits lower and is narrower than a regular production model. Although plenty has been modified, this bonnet is a standard size and shape – just pressed from aluminium to make it lighter.
Most tractors have a compressor but not this one. So the remote-charged scuba tank (bottom one) pushes highenergy air into the exhaust between gearshifts and keeps the turbo spinning. The top two provide air to the brakes.
Under the bonnet, things look way more motorsport than agriculture. You can see the huge 5.0-bar turbo here, plus an exhaust partly 3D printed from Inconel to cope with near-four-figure gas temperatures leaving the engine.
The main instrument pack is widely configurable but this is the go-to working layout: speedo, gear position, rev counter, a few temperatures and a big red flashing light if anything is going wrong.
Multi-function controller is configured to monitor myriad on-board sensors, with the rest of the switches – clearly marked or a bright red push button – fairly self-explanatory. It starts on a rotating toggle.
Gearlever gate like a classic Ferrari’s, only beefier. Magnetic sensors at the end of each gate detect gear position because the Fastrac adjusts torque delivery in each gear. The wire is for a push-to-talk radio button.
JCB Fastrac Two's cockpit looks spare, but has plenty of tech
FIA-approved Cobra motorsport seat is straight racing-car specification and fitted with a five-point racing harness. Even with a helmet on, though, there’s ample head room beneath the roll-cage.
JCB offers two base ranges of the Fastrac tractor, the 4000 and 8000
JCB Fastrac Two's straight-line performance can't fail to impress
JCB’s 672 engine is a 7.2-litre straight six that puts out 1016bhp and 1770lb ft in record-run trim. Its 5.0-bar turbo is joined by an electrically driven supercharger.
WFT uses more than 50% of standard Fastrac parts but the detailed motorsport-grade engineering, including streamlining and lightening, are more eye-catching.
Williams Advanced Engineering was involved in the analysis and development of the WFT’s aerodynamics, which includes a front splitter, belly plate and rear diffuser.
As tractors go, the JCB Fastrac Two is in a league of its own
The JCB Fastrac Two is the world's fastest tractor
JCB Fastrac Two: The world's fastest tractor

The JCB Fastrac has 150mph potential. Yes, really. We drive it

01 Jan 2020 | 84298 Views | By Matt Prior, Autocar UK

Six months ago, this tractor did not exist. JCB had just set a new land speed record in a Fastrac tractor, an impressive 103mph (165kph). But, as you may have seen on Channel 4 recently, the JCB team and their nominated driver, Guy Martin, didn’t think that was fast enough.

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