We have an armoury of drills, but....there is always a better way!
Current lineup:
2001 Kockerling AT300, bought from a member on this very forum a few years ago. Its now mostly used for drilling beans 5" deep, which it is very good at. It leaves too rough a job ideally for cereals, and is very power hungry. It used to drill cover crops as well, less so these days.
2018 Moore (3m mounted) bought via a Countryside productivity grant in the first round. Drills 300ac of cover crops, and spring oats into about 30ac of cc. Also wheat after beans usually too.. Its contour following is poor, and floating ring Guttler packer a long way from ideal in anything but dry going. (We've just today removed most of the floating rings and fitted some farmertastic scrapers.)
2015 3m Pottinger combination, with ADD discs. Superb. Cant fault it all, but it doesn't fit our longer term plan of decreasing cultivation and increasing direct drilling. It will stay, because for things like wheat after spuds its pretty unbeatable.
1996 4m Amazone combi (suffolk coulters) does very little really. Sometimes comes out to drill winter barley behind the plough if the Pottinger is busy drilling wheat on strong land. Power harrow used for beet seedbeds, or it'd probably of been sold. It was bought originally to increase drilling output, but narrow roads and suffolk coulters have dictated that it wasn't the best choice.
I'd like to reduce this to just two, the Pottinger and a more versatile direct drill.
Having watched others, and considered our situation, I'm leaning towards a leading cutting disc with a sowing tine behind. Not too sure on band width, but need to minimise disturbance, and would like to keep unsown bands under 200mm wide. Contour following important (a Kockerling strength, Moore weakness) Needs to be able to cope with fym, cc's, general trash, and any possible soil type.
The Virkar looks good, but no 4m machine, 6m likely beyond budget. We couldn't cope with the wheels running on the drilling either, thats a big no.
Claydon LD option interesting - no contour following, and I question its suitability for beans. The elements are swappable, which is good, but makes it too expensive for our area.
I'm considering converting the Kockerling from 7x 17" shares, to 14x VOS openers. The idea is in the early stages of research, so comments/ideas welcome.
I would sell all but the Pottinger and invest in a more suitable solution, but I like to prove the principle of wacky ideas is sound at low cost first, and I cannot sell the Moore til late 2023 due to the grant constraints.
We have this spring built a low disturbance tine bar to couple to the front of the Moore - its ok, but blocks the drill in wetter heavier going. There's better ways, I am sure.
There is doubtless other options I've not thought about, so over to the TFF collective wisdom!
Cheers, Spud
Current lineup:
2001 Kockerling AT300, bought from a member on this very forum a few years ago. Its now mostly used for drilling beans 5" deep, which it is very good at. It leaves too rough a job ideally for cereals, and is very power hungry. It used to drill cover crops as well, less so these days.
2018 Moore (3m mounted) bought via a Countryside productivity grant in the first round. Drills 300ac of cover crops, and spring oats into about 30ac of cc. Also wheat after beans usually too.. Its contour following is poor, and floating ring Guttler packer a long way from ideal in anything but dry going. (We've just today removed most of the floating rings and fitted some farmertastic scrapers.)
2015 3m Pottinger combination, with ADD discs. Superb. Cant fault it all, but it doesn't fit our longer term plan of decreasing cultivation and increasing direct drilling. It will stay, because for things like wheat after spuds its pretty unbeatable.
1996 4m Amazone combi (suffolk coulters) does very little really. Sometimes comes out to drill winter barley behind the plough if the Pottinger is busy drilling wheat on strong land. Power harrow used for beet seedbeds, or it'd probably of been sold. It was bought originally to increase drilling output, but narrow roads and suffolk coulters have dictated that it wasn't the best choice.
I'd like to reduce this to just two, the Pottinger and a more versatile direct drill.
Having watched others, and considered our situation, I'm leaning towards a leading cutting disc with a sowing tine behind. Not too sure on band width, but need to minimise disturbance, and would like to keep unsown bands under 200mm wide. Contour following important (a Kockerling strength, Moore weakness) Needs to be able to cope with fym, cc's, general trash, and any possible soil type.
The Virkar looks good, but no 4m machine, 6m likely beyond budget. We couldn't cope with the wheels running on the drilling either, thats a big no.
Claydon LD option interesting - no contour following, and I question its suitability for beans. The elements are swappable, which is good, but makes it too expensive for our area.
I'm considering converting the Kockerling from 7x 17" shares, to 14x VOS openers. The idea is in the early stages of research, so comments/ideas welcome.
I would sell all but the Pottinger and invest in a more suitable solution, but I like to prove the principle of wacky ideas is sound at low cost first, and I cannot sell the Moore til late 2023 due to the grant constraints.
We have this spring built a low disturbance tine bar to couple to the front of the Moore - its ok, but blocks the drill in wetter heavier going. There's better ways, I am sure.
There is doubtless other options I've not thought about, so over to the TFF collective wisdom!
Cheers, Spud