I'm making it an issueIJ I'd call it setting the record straight, which I do any time I see misinformation posted on forums. Rated speed of the 6125 is 2200 rpm, as you said. If you load it to 2100, you're lugging the engine. It is designed to run and is rated at 2200, and the horsepower rating at that engine speed is 375. Pulling an engine down past rated rpm is done to establish a torque curve and compute torque-rise, not in order to get 400 horsepower out of a 375 horsepower engine. It's a Class VIII machine, whether you think so or not. I can get 340 out of an 8520 if I pull it down far enough, but that doesn't make it a 340 PTO-hp tractor. My facts come directly off of Deere.com. If you want to get technical about 408 horsepower unloading or 410, I can tell you that a 20 degree rise in fuel temperature during the day will make more than 2 hp difference at the flywheel. And that 408_410 horsepower level is not achieved by lugging the engine down, it's done by increasing fuel delivery during power-boost situations. I based my comments on the fact that I'm a JD tech and although I work mainly on big row-crop tractors, I did some service work on one of the 3 9860s we had running here this year, and rode several rounds in it doing the harvesting I described - high-yielding corn with a 12-row head and a combine loaded to the maximum. I can't speak to it's performance in wheat, and didn't do so. I could clue you in on some faults and potential problems you might encounter with the 9860, and we also had several 9760s running here this year in one of the best corn years for a long time, so I could give you my thoughts on the 9760 vs 9860 debate, but you probably don't want to hear them, as that could be called "making them an issue". I would say that the 373 hp being the upper limit of the 6081 might be accurate to an extent, but since that horsepower level only occurs during unloading on an intermittent basis, I wouldn't be scared of it, as an 8520 has to produce similar flywheel numbers in order to make the PTO horsepower they do, which is usually in the 280-290 range, and we've had very few problems with those. The 6081 HPCR engine is extremely rugged and strong, but clearly Deere realizes that the 450-series needs to get bigger, which is why the 4-valve 6090 will be coming along.