Villengineer
Gold Member
I'd have to disagree. I find myself looking backward a whole lot more on my CUT than I ever remember looking backward when I was actually working on farms. First, I found that if I was looking backward when plowing, discing, etc... that I would let the tractor wander. One of the farmers I worked for told me that once you're in the field never look backward unless making a turn. Second, usually when I'm on the CUT I'm looking back because I'm working in tighter quarters or around more obsticals than I regularly operated large farm equipment around.
On a humerous side note, not looking back can bite you in the rear. Back in the day I was working on a large farm and was discing using a Steiger and a very wide bi-fold disc. Well, I forgot to look back when making a turn and I had swung too wide and snagged the fence row on the end of the disc. I think this was due to the euphoria that operating a piece of equipment like that brings, but I digress. Anyway I ripped out about 50-75 yards of fencing before I realized what I had done. Amazing how much power those tractors have because I didn't "feel" it, I just happened to look out the side window and it caught my eye. Unfortunately, that was the last time that farmer let me operate the big articulating tractors and I spent the next day replacing fence. I did learn to respect the equipment though.
On a humerous side note, not looking back can bite you in the rear. Back in the day I was working on a large farm and was discing using a Steiger and a very wide bi-fold disc. Well, I forgot to look back when making a turn and I had swung too wide and snagged the fence row on the end of the disc. I think this was due to the euphoria that operating a piece of equipment like that brings, but I digress. Anyway I ripped out about 50-75 yards of fencing before I realized what I had done. Amazing how much power those tractors have because I didn't "feel" it, I just happened to look out the side window and it caught my eye. Unfortunately, that was the last time that farmer let me operate the big articulating tractors and I spent the next day replacing fence. I did learn to respect the equipment though.