Lemme guess
overhanging limb on access trail
bill
No my face cracked it when dropped the front end into a ditch....
That looks like a good stand. How are the ears producing? What drive setting and box setting did you use?Corn with the drill turned out ok. A bit light as I suspected but that's leaving some room for volunteer beans that are in there.
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Don't ask about the cracked windshield
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ok even with my Kubota 7040 their is a lot of slop in my bottom draft bars on my LP3P drill. so it slides a lot from side to side. I found some bushings that help but still have too much slop and tired of adding several washers to make it all tight. Any suggestions to make this better?
Scares me and drives me nuts when the drill slides from side to side.
^ Was thinking the same thing. Not sure your stabilizer set up ? .....but mine can be pinned so the drill is contained to pull straight.You can probably take some slack out of the stabilizer bars or chains whatever your tractor has to keep the 3 pt from swinging, if I understand the question.
This^^^^^ Was thinking the same thing. Not sure your stabilizer set up ? .....but mine can be pinned so the drill is contained to pull straight.
I had stabilizer chains on my first tractor (JD 790). After that I have had stabilizer bars which are pinned. FAR and away superior set up. Knowing what I know now.....I would replace any chain set up with bars. I have QD stainless pins which have a detent ball.....and can alter mine very quickly to fit any situation. Look at a tractor dealer and compare. Then use google to find what you want / need.This^^^^
TSC carries them
they are cheap and easy to find
bill
I absolutely think your drill “drills” better than mine. If I had big flat open plots I would have your drill.Good thread. I have the LP 606NT pull behind so much of this doesnt apply to my drill, but interesting nonetheless. I only got maybe halfway through but it looks like you 3 Pt guys have things mostly figured out.
I absolutely think your drill “drills” better than mine. If I had big flat open plots I would have your drill.
For my land with hills and brush and trees and oxbow shaped plots my 3pt makes more sense. r And drills the seed well enough.
I agree with this. I had the chance to drill about 7 acres total a couple days ago with my 3p600 on an L4240. About 4 acres are old farm field that is flat and fine for a pull type drill. The rest is anything from 0.05 to 0.5 acres. It took a lot of maneuvering just to lime these small plots with a Groundbuster, which is a lot smaller than a 606nt. That being said, given the lack of rain and plot compaction from working in them (grading, stump removal, etc.), I was "only" able to drill 3/4" deep in some areas, whereas the full NT would likely cut deeper. My opinion is that it wont make a difference for the large box seeds I usually plant e.g. cereal grains, radishes, etc. A buddy and I spent a bit of time playing with calibration and I was able to easily mix a 12 or 14 seed mix split between both boxes. The metering seemed incredibly accurate as I had a tiny amount of seed left when I finished, as planned. Going forward, it will be very easy to plant whatever mix I dream up, all in one pass. Of note, this was the second time I used the drill. After we did extensive work on several plots in June, I drilled some long season brassicas just as a test and to cover the soil. I ran them from the big box and drilled at 1/4-1/2". They germinated perfectly but between weed competition and deer browse, they didn't canopy, which is why I replanted (I suspected this would happen but wanted to try out the new toy!)I absolutely think your drill “drills” better than mine. If I had big flat open plots I would have your drill.
For my land with hills and brush and trees and oxbow shaped plots my 3pt makes more sense. And drills the seed well enough.