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Implement weight is one factor. Grain Drills are heavy implements, often taxing lift capacity of compact tractors. Sometimes I pull 2" - 3" trees out of MOIST ground with chains connecting the stump to both Lower Links equally. Cannot do this will FEL; the rear wheels lift. Sometimes one blunders upon a used, bargain priced implement just a little heavier than optimum for tractor width. Nice to have a margin of 3-PT. lift capacity in this scene.
Implement weight is another factor. Long implements, such as mounted Disc Harrows and Bush Hogs have greater effective load on Three Point Hitch due to leverage.
I have great respect for Atsah's posts but I disagree in this case.
1) The front gangs of a mounted Disc Harrow are the cutting/penetration gangs, which throw dirt OUT. Penetration is properly increased by increasing front gang angles, which also increases draft force resistance.
The hitch tower is in the way of adding weight to the front gangs.
2) The rear gangs of a mounted Disc Harrow are the wider, smoothing gangs, which gather dirt IN.
If you add weight to the rear, your ground will be needlessly rough and there is usually a fat windrow/mound after the harrow, which is a leveling implement.
Rear gangs are adjusted less aggressively, usually two increments less aggressively than front gangs, but trial and error. If adjusted "flat" rear gangs are thin wheels rolling over the ground, gathering no dirt, doing no leveling.
Buy enough tractor.
Buy enough Disc Harrow.
It takes 45 pounds of total Disc Harrow weight bearing on each "disc" to smooth/level in two passes in most soil; one pass in moist soil in reasonable tilth. Generally speaking 45 pounds/disc means mounted Disc Harrow with "discs" 20" in diameter.
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