farmerboybill
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2008
- Messages
- 782
- Location
- Southwestern Wisconsin
- Tractor
- BCS 850 diesel and 735 diesel
Hi 955,
It depends on the model.
A solid axle machine (715, 725, 710, 730, 718, 722, G85, etc.) is a bear, especially with larger tires or wheel extensions. In tight areas, you'll end up going forward and backward a few times. There's a cheat - poor mans differential - but you can't use them to till.
A differential machine (735, 745, 737, 605, 850, 853, 107d, etc.) is easy peasy. You simply unlock the differential and spin it. If you're in a higher gear and you grab one brake, it'll spin faster'n you can!
It depends on the model.
A solid axle machine (715, 725, 710, 730, 718, 722, G85, etc.) is a bear, especially with larger tires or wheel extensions. In tight areas, you'll end up going forward and backward a few times. There's a cheat - poor mans differential - but you can't use them to till.
A differential machine (735, 745, 737, 605, 850, 853, 107d, etc.) is easy peasy. You simply unlock the differential and spin it. If you're in a higher gear and you grab one brake, it'll spin faster'n you can!