if you want a disc to really plow up the ground.you need a disc with the cutting blades.they are called plowing discs.
My current one has the scalloped blades. Are these the same as "plowing disk blades"?
I was thinking about building a wooden mold so I could pour a concrete weight for the disk. Any opinions on how heavy I should make it?
Unless you're disk is built to have weight added, just like any implement with added weight that is not built for that added weight, the additional strain that is put on the implement from the added weight is going to cause that implement to fail prematurely. Follow that? :laughing: From what I have seen, typically a pull disk looks like they work better than a 3pt disk.![]()
So you think that a 8' pull behind type disk will work faster/better than my 8' 3 point disk? I have to make several passes now to achieve the results I want. I want to shorten the time it takes me to disk my fields.
I am using this for food plots and for managing my moist soil units for duck hunting.
Its basically open fields and large 5+ acre clearings. The land is flat and sandy loam. Easy to till. I would think the added weight of the pull behind frame would be enough to disk better

Yes, a pull behind disc does a better job overall than a 3PH disc. Both have their uses but for the type of discing you describe the pull behind would need fewer passes and the results would be more even.
Now, if you dragged it and used a cultipacker you would really have an impressive result.