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Breaking discs

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  • the big wheel
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2017
    • 3860

    Breaking discs

    Lots of areas that would never be considered
    To farm are dry so wondering what are good
    Sod type discs? See some deep curved blades
    Not sure if those cut as good as the others?
  • Guest

    #2
    kello bilt is all you need
    doesn't matter if its 30 years old

    Comment

    • blackpowder
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2010
      • 9246

      #3
      Depends if you're renting or buying.
      My 225 kello too light to cut real hard stuff without a weight box. They make heavier models. Never changed a Kello bearing.
      However, anything else and your fixing steady unless it's new. Wisheks you rent only but they're heavy.
      Our Landoll will do sloughs etc in 3-4 passes but it's still awful expensive to run.
      Discs are like sheep. Born to die.

      Comment

      • furrowtickler
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2004
        • 21856

        #4
        We have an old Allis Chalmers tandem disc
        Works ok but it is getting very wore now .
        Very hard to even get parts the past few years

        Comment

        • Taiga
          Senior Member
          • Jul 2018
          • 1460

          #5
          Have a 30’ Wishek 842 that has been very good, seen a lot of brush and rocks. Wishek’s are a lot heavier than Kello at over 1000lbs/ft. Kelly’s are good though.
          The 22’ Wishek is the worst size, and is the size Flaman rents, because the wings are too short and so they don’t have the weight on the wings and they ride up and don’t penetrate as deep as the center main frame.

          Comment

          • jamesb
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 769

            #6
            We have rented disks in the past from Flamans etc and it works but always would have liked to have something handy for the old slough as it comes up. Our old 27 foot Case disk was great for normal field work but take it into a slough with rocks and your breaking blades constantly. Several years ago I finally found a Rome disk at a cheap price. Those old Rome disks are basically indestructible IMO. Our is only 12 feet but its great as fire guard unit and follows the combine quite a bit if needed (once). The amount of old rock piles in the bottom of sloughs that we discover when the disk goes over them is pretty common (lots of rocks in my parts). Ours came out of Nebraska on Big Iron auctions.

            Comment

            • Herc
              Senior Member
              • Jul 2017
              • 772

              #7
              Kello 275 16’. Cheaper than wishek and will outlast anything else on ur farm. Like everything a new one 15 years ago was $20k. Now they’ll be $40k….and here’s the kicker, nothing has changed on them.

              Comment

              • Sheepwheat
                Senior Member
                • Jun 2017
                • 3137

                #8
                I’ll give you guys the good news if you want to hear it.

                I have rented discs three times in the fall, to “retake” sloughs and put them back into production. Each time, it caused excessive rainfall, and it was a waste of my time and money.

                But when you get those sloughs nice n black, it WILL rain, and do its best to fill them back up with water.

                So good on y’all for giving it a whirl. Western Canada will thank you.

                Comment

                • the big wheel
                  Senior Member
                  • Mar 2017
                  • 3860

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Sheepwheat View Post
                  I’ll give you guys the good news if you want to hear it.

                  I have rented discs three times in the fall, to “retake” sloughs and put them back into production. Each time, it caused excessive rainfall, and it was a waste of my time and money.

                  But when you get those sloughs nice n black, it WILL rain, and do its best to fill them back up with water.

                  So good on y’all for giving it a whirl. Western Canada will thank you.
                  That could be 100% correct but I did a few
                  So called sloughs last fall with an older deep tiller
                  And used neighbours light disks that ended
                  Up a work project in replacing bearings.
                  But those areas at least had something
                  That resembled a crop. It didn’t make a whole
                  Lot of money as not a big area but at least i
                  Had something to look at all year that I wasn’t
                  Depressed about. Lol
                  But you could be right could be all for nothing
                  But if my disking holes causes rain I m all in!!
                  Might not fit your area I understand.

                  Comment

                  • workboots
                    Senior Member
                    • Oct 2009
                    • 126

                    #10
                    The 26ft Wishek has been a good unit on our farm. It’s chewing up some low spots right now that have been unattainable for 20 some years. It’s a nice feeling when your gaining ground, especially if you try to keep your mind off the reality that the lifeblood of your business went extinct from these low places and they might be the only legitimate crop next season.
                    We did make the mistake of overgreasing the greasable bearings on the wishek and pushing out some seals. It’s a real dusi of a job changing them out. The Kello-bilt disc we had for some time had an oil bath bearing that was bulletproof but it was too light for a lot of jobs.

                    Comment

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