kebo
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2006
- Messages
- 2,928
- Location
- Lexington, SC
- Tractor
- 2001 John Deere 790 4x4, bar tires
Today I went and looked at an attachment that was listed as a 6ft cultipacker on craigslist. I had been wanting one to help put in food plots at the hunt club. It looked pretty good in the pic's, but after I got there and started looking at it closely, I realized this unit was a homemade job. Not done too badly, but certainly could have been done better. The odd thing about it you will notice is that it has 4 rippers on the front. Whoever thought to do something like that?? I mean, does it really do much/any good to rip the ground about 4ft wide, then come right back over it and pack it down about 5 1/2ft wide? :confused2: First thing I do will be taking the rippers off when I get it unloaded out of the truck. I will probably have to fabricate parking stands, on the front and one on the back.
The actual "track" of the discs is about 66" wide, plenty wide enough to cover tire tracks on my 790, so that part is ok. The best I can measure, the packing wheels are about 11" in diameter and there are 18 of them on it. The packing wheels are floating on the axle, which I think they are supposed to. But... something that disturbs me is that the axle appears to be floating within their end housings. This is my first cultipacker, but I don't think that is the norm? I know some packers have wood bearing blocks for the axles to ride in, maybe the wood is just gone? I think it will at least do the job for now, but this winter I might take it apart and see what the insides of those end housings look like. Then again, I might regret doing that!!
Does anyone recognize what brand of cultipacker this might have been made from? Is there any advantage to using the wheels that have the sprockets (or teeth) in them?? If it does help with the seed packing, I might consider taking out a few of the smooth wheels and putting in the sprocket type, maybe every other wheel.
Oh yeah, the seller was asking $375, but I got him down to $325, so I don't think I did too bad. What are your thoughts on it??
Keith




The actual "track" of the discs is about 66" wide, plenty wide enough to cover tire tracks on my 790, so that part is ok. The best I can measure, the packing wheels are about 11" in diameter and there are 18 of them on it. The packing wheels are floating on the axle, which I think they are supposed to. But... something that disturbs me is that the axle appears to be floating within their end housings. This is my first cultipacker, but I don't think that is the norm? I know some packers have wood bearing blocks for the axles to ride in, maybe the wood is just gone? I think it will at least do the job for now, but this winter I might take it apart and see what the insides of those end housings look like. Then again, I might regret doing that!!
Does anyone recognize what brand of cultipacker this might have been made from? Is there any advantage to using the wheels that have the sprockets (or teeth) in them?? If it does help with the seed packing, I might consider taking out a few of the smooth wheels and putting in the sprocket type, maybe every other wheel.
Oh yeah, the seller was asking $375, but I got him down to $325, so I don't think I did too bad. What are your thoughts on it??
Keith



