[AT] Am I crazy?
charlie hill
chill8 at cox.net
Fri Feb 24 05:06:33 PST 2006
Thanks Greg. That does help. I think I know what they do now.
It seems like it would be a pretty slow operation. Not to well suited to 21
century farming but it would probably be good for a small garden.
Charlie
----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg Hass" <gkhass at avci.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2006 8:48 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] Am I crazy?
>I will try to take a shot at how the weed controllers work.
>
> First of all, they only replace the front tooth of a cultivator. You
> still need the rest of the teeth to clean out the centers. When mounted
> on the tractor cultivator, one shank goes on each side of the row. When
> mounted upright in the cultivator you essentially have 2 miniature grader
> blades on each side of the row of crop. The front blade is about 3" x 6",
> the back blade a little shorter. They do not lay flat and slice under the
> soil like a normal cultivator tooth. The front blade is set to go about
> 1" deep, and (like a grader blade) set on an angle. It pushes the top
> inch of soil away from the plant, leveling the ground and pushing any
> weeds and clods of dirt 4" away from the row. The front blades are set to
> go as close to the row as possible without catching the plants.
>
> The back two blades are also set at an angle, and 1-1/2" or so deeper than
> the front 2 blades. (Remember, you've got a set of blades on each side of
> the row.) The back blades are shorter because you don't want to grab the
> weeds and clods that the front set pushed away from the plant. The back
> blades are then like 2 short grader blades grading the freshly exposed
> dirt toward the plant, and it rolls the dirt up against the plant under
> the leaves with less danger of covering them than with a regular
> cultivator (which more or less throws the dirt toward the plant). This is
> why they work so well on crops like edible beans in our area, because it
> more or less grades the dirt under the leaves and covers the weeds without
> covering as many beans. This is also the reason why they do not work in
> hard ground. Because they are just shoving the soil one way or another,
> they have no actual tooth to dig into the ground. Hope this helps to make
> it clear and not confuse the issue even more.
>
> In theory, they maybe could be used to hill potatoes, but they would have
> to be adjusted so the front blade did nothing and only the rear blade
> moved dirt. But because the rear blades are so small, you would at most
> be able to move 10% of the dirt necessary to hill potatoes.
>
> Greg Hass
> From the tip of Michigan's Thumb
>
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