I'd never place a slab, or even a sidewalk, without rebar. It's just a terrible place to cheap out. As others have said, the slab will crack. The questions are, will the cracks expand, or not? Will the slab shift so that the lip of the cracks are higher on one side than the other? Without rebar the answers to both will likely be 'yes'. With it, they'll likely both be 'no'.
Mark
For a sidewalk at the least use some mesh.
Slabs and driveways always with rebar, yes.
OP has a 10k lb tractor.
Meh.
10k lb tractors have large tires and a large contact area. I wouldn't worry about that weight at all.
But as you mentioned the rebar will keep the inevitable cracks from separating or being uneven.
Fiber will not do that.
I cannot understand a reason why rebar wouldn't be used.
Cost?
It's a small price to pay up front , compared to shifting concrete and have to rip it out and start over.
No mention of digging out beams at least around the perimeter or piers where columns will be.
My 40x60 has a beam of 12x24 deep around the perimeter that sits on piers where the corners are and in where the I beams are located at 20ft o.c.
Further there is a grid 20ftx20ft of 12x12 beams for the whole floor.
Rebar is 3/8, 16" o.c. in the field , in the beams is 4 or 6, 1/2" rebar can't remember and piers are a spiral rebar with 6(?) Vertical members.
Do not skimp on concrete and reinforcement for it.