SimTech Aitchison Drills

neilo

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Montgomeryshire

That's the tips that mine had. The 'bigger brother' TSem now has slightly different ones, on different boots. I'll try to get a picture tomorrow if I remember.

A tip for you @Yale, keep any worn points when you take them off, then you'll have a supply of part worn ones to match any that get broken later.(y) Not that you should have to change them for a few years (supposed to last for about 500ac IIRC).
 

neilo

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Montgomeryshire
Inaugural flight today (Spring Barley into tilled ground ex grazed beet):

2B8E259F-9301-4821-B020-114C627CD10F.jpeg
 

Ruston3w

Member
Location
south suffolk
ok, looks good, have you got to harrow/roll after?
Still not got the hang of levelling beet land here without moving too much soil...that's where i miss the Horsch, you could drag as much dirt as you needed, even with a variety of front presses we still make too much work in front of the simtech
 

neilo

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Montgomeryshire
ok, looks good, have you got to harrow/roll after?
Still not got the hang of levelling beet land here without moving too much soil...that's where i miss the Horsch, you could drag as much dirt as you needed, even with a variety of front presses we still make too much work in front of the simtech

I’ll roll after, to keep the moisture in for when the drought hits next week....:facepalm:

The Delta moves a fair bit of soil tbh, but without bringing stones up. I did the same on another field that was lifted beet, to remove the inevitable compaction from the lifting, and then the surface capping from the sheep that were in afterwards.
The Simtech works better if the ground has been rolled beforehand, if it’s been cultivated, or depth control can be a bit erratic IME. You can replace the leading discs with a roller to achieve the same, but more £s obviously.
 
If drilling into a medium that allows the 'tunnel' to remain open, the depth doesn't really matter - I remember being told about a chap in Scotland drilling turnips 3-4"! But if the slots collapse such as drilling in stubble, you need to go very shallow or the seed just gets buried. I think you are probably better having a disc drill for stubbles.
 

neilo

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Montgomeryshire
As above, it depends on soil conditions. I drilled some grass into soft (cultivated) conditions in the Spring, where I practically sprinkled the grass & clover on the surface.
A fortnight ago I DD’ed stubble turnips into rock hard stubble (ahead of promised rain), where I was pretty well chipping a trough in the hard clay, dropping the seed in and dragging the shattered dust loosely over the slot.
 
Calibrated SimTech for forage rape today, but used 30% more than I should of when drilling the field and no ides why. Used it last on beans and wonder if that has affected the accuracy for small seed by either stretching the springs or wearing the sponges Any ideas ?
 

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