pmsmechanic
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2013
- Messages
- 4,212
- Location
- Southern Alberta, Canada
- Tractor
- 4410 and F-935 John Deere, MF 245
Buy the heaviest tiller you can afford. (Lbs/foot of width) Also the tillers with six tines / spider leave a better job than four tines / spider. It's also why some tillers are cheaper than others.
I have a John Deere 660. It certainly was not the cheapest tiller available at the time. It has an 18" tine circle which is the main reason I didn't buy a new one when I bought a new tractor. I can rototill a garden that hasn't been cleaned up. In fact a lot of my customers don't clean up their gardens in the fall. In spring I just come in and bury it all with the tiller. Corn stalks and cucumber vines are not a problem.
I have a John Deere 660. It certainly was not the cheapest tiller available at the time. It has an 18" tine circle which is the main reason I didn't buy a new one when I bought a new tractor. I can rototill a garden that hasn't been cleaned up. In fact a lot of my customers don't clean up their gardens in the fall. In spring I just come in and bury it all with the tiller. Corn stalks and cucumber vines are not a problem.