BMan2005
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2017
- Messages
- 605
- Location
- GA
- Tractor
- 17' New Holland Workmaster 60 & 02' Kubota L3000F
Just finished doing this on our property. Use the Offset disk to cut and turn the dirt, then use the tandem disk at a 45* from how you ran the Offsets. If you still have some fairly rough ground or still not quite happy hit it again at a 45* from the last time. Follow behind this with a Land Plane if you can get your hands on one. I went over mine 3x at a 45* angle from the last time. My land is not laser level, but it took out all of the sharp dips or hills and gave my land a good even flow. It will take you awhile with that size tractor and 8 foot implements but it will get you there. Btw, my tractor is a 60 HP, same frame size, and all my stuff is 8 also.
The pictures I added are from the beginning where you couldn?t stand just easing through it on our Polaris ranger, first pass disking (I did disk it twice the season before), grading with a Land plane I built, to the final grade where we are installing fence for the pasture. I am only converting 14 acres on our place to pasture so I know you have your work cut out for you. Good luck and keep at it.
Edit***. Tip, use the land plane when the dirt does not have a lot of moisture. So try to plan disking and leveling a area with the plane when the dirt has little to no moisture and have it leveled before a rain after disking. My land plane with cutting edges will still load up with dirt if conditions are not right for the material to flow, some build up is good to fill low spots but to much build up, well you obviously know what that does from your post. Haha
The pictures I added are from the beginning where you couldn?t stand just easing through it on our Polaris ranger, first pass disking (I did disk it twice the season before), grading with a Land plane I built, to the final grade where we are installing fence for the pasture. I am only converting 14 acres on our place to pasture so I know you have your work cut out for you. Good luck and keep at it.
Edit***. Tip, use the land plane when the dirt does not have a lot of moisture. So try to plan disking and leveling a area with the plane when the dirt has little to no moisture and have it leveled before a rain after disking. My land plane with cutting edges will still load up with dirt if conditions are not right for the material to flow, some build up is good to fill low spots but to much build up, well you obviously know what that does from your post. Haha
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