Jeff9366 has largely beaten me to the punch about plowing with a 20 HP tractor - the Ford 9N, 2N and 8N. Now, I’m a tractor collector and not a real farmer, but tractor shows often have plowing demonstrations and I always wade in with one of my N tractors. Back in the day Ford farmers used either a 16” one bottom or a 12” or 14” two bottom plow. There are three secrets:
Weight: Farmers loaded the rear tires.
Setup: Plow share bottom is flat on the ground with left rear wheel up on a 4” block, EXCEPT point is tilted slightly downward. If this sounds slightly contradictory it is. You have to make adjustments, especially with a badly worn plow share.
Technique: separate left and right rear wheel brakes are there for a reason. You will probably have more problem with the left wheel spinning than the right. My Kubota
L3010 has a differential lock which would do the same thing if I ever tried to plow with it, which I have not. I’m not a real farmer and the gray market (oh no!) Yanmar rototiller on the Kubby tills the garden just fine.
A long time ago a now deceased collector and old time farm boy named Zane Sherman posted on his website the best treatise on plowing that I have ever seen. It was called “Plow A Little Now”. He covered every aspect of setting up the plow. Zane is gone and the website is down but you may find a copy in the data section over on the
www.Ntractorclub.com website. I haven’t checked so no guarantee. I’d gladly post my copy if I could figure out how.