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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag and No-till Machinery
SimTech Aitchison Drills
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<blockquote data-quote="Richard III" data-source="post: 275276" data-attributes="member: 933"><p>I left posting on this for a while hoping Simon C would post, as you can see from what he has written above, he is the Sim-Tec on clay expert on here.</p><p></p><p>I am another happy Sim-Tec user and although I am not on heavy clay I often have to drill in the wet, something the Sim-Tec excels at. It is a very versatile drill and will run in all sorts of different conditions. It's lack of hairpinning when drilling into wet chopped straw is particularly important to me.</p><p></p><p>It's only down sides are that it generally needs the slots closing somehow after drilling (as Simon C says above) and it is quite high soil disturbance. For these two reasons I also run an old moore unidrill.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Richard III, post: 275276, member: 933"] I left posting on this for a while hoping Simon C would post, as you can see from what he has written above, he is the Sim-Tec on clay expert on here. I am another happy Sim-Tec user and although I am not on heavy clay I often have to drill in the wet, something the Sim-Tec excels at. It is a very versatile drill and will run in all sorts of different conditions. It's lack of hairpinning when drilling into wet chopped straw is particularly important to me. It's only down sides are that it generally needs the slots closing somehow after drilling (as Simon C says above) and it is quite high soil disturbance. For these two reasons I also run an old moore unidrill. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag and No-till Machinery
SimTech Aitchison Drills
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