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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
john deere 750a
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<blockquote data-quote="Clive" data-source="post: 7228499" data-attributes="member: 6"><p>not just cross slot coulters though is it ? the last 2 seasons have bern extreme and very few drills have coped well with that even varderstads have been useless in extreme wet but does that suddenly mean after decades of proving success they no good ?</p><p></p><p>of course not !</p><p></p><p>a simple, lightweight tine is the best option when extreme wet but although thats forefront of our minds right now its (hopefully) not the normal</p><p></p><p>in note normal years, coulter pressure, slot closure, ability to deal with covercrops and consolidation are all very important in direct drills - most tine drills do not excel at that in my experience</p><p></p><p>if weather continues to have these extreme years a lightweight Co or sabre tine certainly does seem like sensible insurance however !</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Clive, post: 7228499, member: 6"] not just cross slot coulters though is it ? the last 2 seasons have bern extreme and very few drills have coped well with that even varderstads have been useless in extreme wet but does that suddenly mean after decades of proving success they no good ? of course not ! a simple, lightweight tine is the best option when extreme wet but although thats forefront of our minds right now its (hopefully) not the normal in note normal years, coulter pressure, slot closure, ability to deal with covercrops and consolidation are all very important in direct drills - most tine drills do not excel at that in my experience if weather continues to have these extreme years a lightweight Co or sabre tine certainly does seem like sensible insurance however ! [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
john deere 750a
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