jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 20,387
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Here's a pic of the cultivator I use. Who knows how old it is, rows up nice. )</font>
Rob, that's a dead ringer for mine. I see a nameplate on the left A-frame. I'd bet it says Dearborn somewhere on there. You have two more long feet on the ends of yours that I don't have that give you a little closer sweep spacing. When you don't need them, do you ever take the sweeps out and turn them upside down in the adjustable feet? I do that so I don't put them someplace and forget where they are. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
I also have a nice middle-buster for mine. If you look at the picture of me putting the sweep on, you can see where the front angle has been beefed up. When my Dad first put the middle buster on the cultivator, the frame was not stong enough and crumpled. A little reinforcement and it works perfectly. That middle-buster sure saved a lot of work when it came to digging Irish potatoes. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
Doc Bob: A cultivator is used to lay out row crops and to plow them after they come up until they get so big you would knock them over running over them. There have been many rows of cotton plowed with this style cultivator and young vegetable crops also respond well. By plowing next to the young plants you keep the soil loose and pull in loose dirt around the base of the plant to encourage root growth. Only when the plants get too big to plow do you have to hoe and weed by hand. This type plowing is normally done only once or twice at most until the plants get too big. At least that's how we always used our cultivator.
Oh... and my Dad was too cheap to buy a 3PH planter for use only once per year, so we had a horse-drawn planter with a 3-gallon hopper. we'd chain it behind the center sweep on the tractor and pull it. Either me or my brother had to walk behind the tractor when planting. He and I get a big laugh about the knock-down dragout fights we had out in the middle of the field over who would drive the tractor and who would eat dust behind the tractor. I didn't want to do all the walking and he didn't want to have to straighten out my crooked rows. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif One of our neighbors used to tell my brother that he should not get upset at me because you can get a lot more planted in a crooked row than a straight one. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
Rob, that's a dead ringer for mine. I see a nameplate on the left A-frame. I'd bet it says Dearborn somewhere on there. You have two more long feet on the ends of yours that I don't have that give you a little closer sweep spacing. When you don't need them, do you ever take the sweeps out and turn them upside down in the adjustable feet? I do that so I don't put them someplace and forget where they are. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
I also have a nice middle-buster for mine. If you look at the picture of me putting the sweep on, you can see where the front angle has been beefed up. When my Dad first put the middle buster on the cultivator, the frame was not stong enough and crumpled. A little reinforcement and it works perfectly. That middle-buster sure saved a lot of work when it came to digging Irish potatoes. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
Doc Bob: A cultivator is used to lay out row crops and to plow them after they come up until they get so big you would knock them over running over them. There have been many rows of cotton plowed with this style cultivator and young vegetable crops also respond well. By plowing next to the young plants you keep the soil loose and pull in loose dirt around the base of the plant to encourage root growth. Only when the plants get too big to plow do you have to hoe and weed by hand. This type plowing is normally done only once or twice at most until the plants get too big. At least that's how we always used our cultivator.
Oh... and my Dad was too cheap to buy a 3PH planter for use only once per year, so we had a horse-drawn planter with a 3-gallon hopper. we'd chain it behind the center sweep on the tractor and pull it. Either me or my brother had to walk behind the tractor when planting. He and I get a big laugh about the knock-down dragout fights we had out in the middle of the field over who would drive the tractor and who would eat dust behind the tractor. I didn't want to do all the walking and he didn't want to have to straighten out my crooked rows. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif One of our neighbors used to tell my brother that he should not get upset at me because you can get a lot more planted in a crooked row than a straight one. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif