Rylan L. Carr posted, John Deere No. 51 |
I'm going to take advantage of the nature of a blog and write small postings on various aspects of tillage. Specifically, I'm going to dig into what I learned one farmer does from a video.
Video |
I start the video at a turn because big equipment turning at the end of the runs is more interesting then the runs themselves. (You can always restart it from the beginning if you want.) At the end of the turn you can see the soil conditioning reels before they are lowered back down on the ground. But one thing we do learn from watching the runs is the high speed used by modern farming. I'd estimate 10mph. These higher speeds allow taking advantage of higher horsepower without making the implement bigger. But when I drove tractors in the 1960s, we would not dream of going that fast in the field. Most tractors could do a maximum of 15 mph, and that was on a road. In a field, a brisk walking speed was considered fast. Tractors don't have springs except for under the seat. Even at just a walking speed, you could get bounced pretty bad in a field of harvested corn. Evidently the weight of the tractor and the soft footprint of all the tires reduce the amount of bouncing the frame (and driver) experience and allow faster field speeds. (An Excelerator unfolding and then running. Versatile DT550 pulling an Excelerator.)
Many times fertilizer will be sprayed, or manure spread, on the field before the secondary tillage. The secondary tillage helps "incorporate" the additives into the soil. (The word "incorporate" came from a John Deere brochure. I believe it mans it mixes whatever has been applied on top of the ground into the soil.)
Dominator 4855-13 |
Excelerator 8000-50 |
The Excelerator mounts the discs on short shafts called gangs. Each gang hangs from a bracket and the bracket can be adjusted from 1 to 5 degrees. It has working widths of 14-50'.
Click "Adjustable Gang Angles" in description |
Screenshot from video |
Screenshot from video |
A report lists what different manufactures have to offer as a vertical tillage solution.
Update:
Screenshot from video |
Screenshot from Combines Harvesters Threshers video Carrier tillage cruising [I am dumfounded by how fast they are pulling that thing. But I gather that the baskets/reels at the end require highs speed to fling the clods on top as intended.] |
Update:
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