Get more info on these tillers by clicking this link! www.goodworkstractors.com/product/buy-rhino-ag-rebel-rototiller-rhino-ago-rebel-rotary-tiller-for-sale/
Are you kidding me? That tiller did that with no mowing? I was amazed! Basically it brush cut and graded all in ONE PASS! Mind explosion! I need that in my life! Instant garden beds.
That tractor and tiller combination works amazingly well. You can be sure that a slip-clutch is the ONLY way you can till that kind of ground and not spend all your time replacing shear pins. Results from a single pass with it were outstanding. Nice job, and good video.
Nice job. Makes all the difference with the right equipment. And amazingly made it thru the entire video without 20 UA-cam commercials. Thats a good day! Hopefully we see the results when plots are up
Have you considered Buchwheat for your cover crop? It is about the least expensive seed to buy, broadcast seeding or drill, will attract every pollinator, deer, turkey and other game birds in abundance. Buckwheat will grow fast in a short season, produce at least 30:1, usually more, reseeds itself. Adds Phosphorus to the soil, will grow in any kind or type of soil. You will not be disappointed.
We tilled about a 1/4 acre food plot with my 4066R and 6 ft tiller. We didn’t spray or cut the weeds first - just like you. It took me over two hours to pull all the weeds put of the tines afterwards. All them weeds get wrapped around there and you can’t rotate the tines without a crowbar. Makes it hard to connect the pto because you have to rotate the tines by hand to get the splines on the pto shaft to line up.
Pretty impressive for a little tractor and rotovator. I used used to use 55-60 hp diesel tractors and 60”-72” rotovators. Grass would still get wound up in it and slow things down.
Looks exactly like my Bush Hog RTG72 tiller. It's built like a tank. I switched mine to reverse till and love it that way but I don't have rocky soil. I run mine with a 45hp tractor.
I'm going to try a reverse rotation sometime, I just can't see how it could do better, but I gotta find out for myself! Thanks for watching! FYI, Rhino Ag's parent company bought Bush Hog roughly 11 years ago. alamo-group.com/investor-relations/press-releases/press-pages/alg-completes-acquisition-of-bush-hog.html
The reverse till leaves an even better seed bed. In my experience it covers the existing vegetation even better in a single pass. The downside is sticks are more likely to get stuck in the tines and it wants to throw rocks forward instead of jumping over them. Definitely don’t try it until you have the front guard installed. I made that mistake! Had dirt all over me and my tractor.
@@GoodWorksTractors Been my experience with forward tine tiller that in rocks I break a lot of bolts on the tines. I believe that reverse till would come up under the rocks and not break tines or bolts as bad.
I recently bought five acres of land, about three and a half to four of it is heavily wooded and I have started clearing it. I like the equipment that you are using, and this particular video, seem very cathartic. Not sure why.
Shell in palm beach gardens Florida here. I can't get enough of the videos you're doing. I literally watch all day long it seems when im online doing my stock market stuff. You should do a live cam thing over there. Id be on it all the time.
So much like Saturday morning cartoons I feel wrapped in warm and nostalgic feelings of yesteryear. That tiller is amazing - like Monster Movie Matinee - and waiting for the seeder sequel is like waiting for part 2 of Monster Movie Matinee!!! Outstanding camera work once again Courtney Spielberg!!! :) 👍
Pretty impressive for a single pass! Could you front-mount a flail mower? Would make the tiller work less strenuous, as well as more evenly mixing in the organic matter.
It's so much better if you will double cut. Instead of taking a full cut in that rough stuff, center your hood on the edge of the last cut each time. try it and you will see a much better job and it's easier on your equipment too.
It has a slip clutch, so same thing that happens when a brush hog with slip clutch would hit a hidden stump. Clutch engages until the resistance passes and then back to operation.
Not enough footage to make a video, but did post a picture awhile back from a ground blind overlooking the plots. They came in great. Unfortunately, didn't have any luck this year. The right one didn't come along at the right time.
Outstanding video, glad I found it. I've watched a lot of food plot videos and was considering selling my tiller to get different equipment. Now I know to--till baby, till--thanks to the tractor channel I like. I have a 5 foot Bush Hog, identical to yours as you mentioned, that will be behind my 50 HP Kioti. I'll have some great plots. How bad was the weed regen versus the plot seeds? I should have a bit more time so I'll likely give the weeds a week or two then spray and broadcast. Of course, given the cost of glyphosate this year... As to the weed tangle everybody has mentioned, it appears that better designed tillers don't have as much of a problem thanks to shielding etc.
In your view, and others can respond too, how well will the 60" work with the 1025r? Looking at the specs. It looks like that would be the max. For the tractor, is it one of those situations where "just because you can do it doesn't mean you should?" Thanks!!!
It appears that the shortest one they make is 60" am I correct? I'm impressed by how well it does in one pass. Therefore, it must dig deeper than most others I've seen. My experience in working with hand rear tine and hiring others with 3 PT. tillers is they only go about 3 - 4" deep. I like to go deeper personally.
As a general rule: Try to stay above 3.5hp/foot for roto-tillers and you should be A-OK. This is dependent upon the working travel speed, but what implement isn't? 5x3.5=17.5 so I don't see why it wouldn't work for you. This is effected by so many things (soul condition, blade sharpness, etc.) that a simple equation doesn't fit all of the setups, but as a general rule - it seems to work. Hope it helps! If you do end up running a 60" tiller on that machine, I'd be interested to see the results.
It will work (I used to have a mahindra 25hp with a 60" tiller) but it is pushing the tractor very hard and you have to go very slow. Had a lot of times the tractor wouldn't even maintain rpm and was bogging by about 500 ram even going slow. I have since moved to a 46hp with a 72" tiller and it is night and day - works so much better.
@@cs-rj8ru You're thinking of the Gold Coast - Fairfield & New Haven counties. The Connecticut river valley (aside from some pockets like Hartford) used to have extensive agricultural activities (think tobacco). A bit east & west there was/is a lot of dairy. When you get into my corner (Tolland & Windham counties) there still are a lot of what I'd call hard-scrabble farms, some that involve substantial acreage (by CT standards). Outside of the CT river valley the soil seems to grow rocks, most of which wreak havoc on plows & tillers, or poke up in the hay fields making it challenging to cut the grass. As the generations pass, many farms have surrendered to subdivisions to satisfy greedy heirs (it's more financially beneficial to grow houses rather than agricultural stuff).
It will, but barely and could come down to the exact opening height, tire pressure, tire size. I've had some that rub the weather stripping, some that wouldn't fit until I lowered pressure. However, once I add liquid ballast, lower the psi a bit, I've never had an issue.
So went looking for the results video, none to be found. At least append this one with the progress, post as UPDATED. The tiller works well, impressive.
Wow, great video! I have around 5 acres that I have ran the discs on/box scrape and rock rake and want to smooth out from years of being tilled and planted with corn and sunflowers for doves. It was never smoothed out between years and it’s pretty rough but very good soft topsoil. Would this dig enough to fill the ruts created? I made a drag out of some old power poles and chain link that I could run after using this if you think it would fill/cut out the ruts enough to be level. I’ve been debating on getting a soil pulverized until I saw your video. Thanks for any help!!
I had zero build up issues on the tiller or in the ground. Plus, if you watched the video, then you heard me say I had zero time this year and wanted to mow and spray first, but ran out of time.
Just found this vid, Any chance you could del the cost of the jd tractor, + all hook up equipment, shafts ,links etc. And detail cost on the tillerunit. I'm looking for a set up equal unit. For my farm needs . Well let's see whats available. Thanks
Did you watch it on mute? I explain that I had no time this fall, so making due. Worked out amazingly well. Plots came in good and deer feasting on them every day.
Hi there, I'm stuck in a bit of a predicament. Got a few acres in alfalfa and can't find anyone reliable to cut the crop for me and I won't spend thousands of dollars on buying haying equipment so thought of using my rototiller to only cut and pulverize the plant portion of the crop without touching the ground. I'd make sure my tiller is lifted at least 2-3 inches off the ground at all times so it's not damaging the root and only mowing/mulching the stalk/plant. I'd do that over the course of the summer 3 times and just let the cut field rot and decompose over the winter. I know this is not ideal but would you think a HD rototiller can give nearly as good of a finished product as a flail mower or not? Thanks for your time and hope to get your insights on this.
Hey Kevin, no, it's not going to work. That really isn't how a tiller works. Plus, blade speed (tip speed) is not anywhere near fast enough to cut hay with a tiller.
@@GoodWorksTractors My ultimate goal is not cutting for baling or anything, it's only to knock it down and mulch into usable matter and let it decompose over winter. Of course, I'll be doing it X 3 this summer so we shall see how it goes but I'm trying it on a small test patch first. Not concerned about my crop but I can't spend a $100,000 on haying machinery just to support such small field. I know it's not ideal, but sometimes you gotta work with what you have. And ty for the prompt reply!
Great episode Courtney - With the that tractor & the Rhino Tiller you certainly made short work of this project - So when can you come to Tennessee and do my overgrown field for my miniature donkeys....lol - I looked at the 5 ft. version of the Rhino on your website - Will my 1025r have enough power to run it...?
Unfortunately, it requires 25HP at the PTO...I will say I've ran 60" tillers on the 1023e and the 1025r. Not saying I recommend it, but I always had success running that setup believe it or not.
Rototillers are the best things since Swiss cheese. since I got mine I can do all my food plots in one day that used to take me three and they leave the ground looking silky smooth just incredible. one question you are doing a lot of turning while running your tiller I was told and my tillers manual States you should never turn with the tiller in the ground I think the reason being that it will tear up the bearings or maybe bend the blades?
That sucker really chews, but logically (mathematically), it should. Compared to my setup (1023e+647 tiller) running 3.75hp/foot (which chews quite nicely already) you've got 8.67hp/foot. So with that in mind, there's not a lot that will stand in the way of that.
@@coffindancer38 you don't like the way I measure my power? It seems to be working just fine for me. If it doesn't work for you then use whatever system you prefer, but there's really no need to be a dick about it. A more insightful comment might include how you suggest measuring power, rather than a list of the channels that you like.
I want to use mine for this, but I worry how many roots & rocks I’ll find. Mine’s an older Befco model. I’d have to take a pocket full of shear pins I suppose.
the video said 66HP. Is that at the P.T.O? I ask because I have a 1995 Ford 5030 with claimed 65Hp at the P.T.O. Can the 72 inch tiller be used with 65ish HP? would you risk damaging the gearbox? I am interested in this tiller but that is a lot of money only to damage it with too much HP on the unit. thanks for any reply or suggestions.
Just subbed. I like your channel. I really like when you demo different attachments... BUT... ever thought about adding some red to your tractor offerings? Haha. Great content, sir!
Great video as usual. Did you get a shot of the tiller after eating all that stuff? I just did that and my tiller is all kinds of stopped up. I'm looking for a good way to clean it all out. Suggestions?
Get more info on these tillers by clicking this link! www.goodworkstractors.com/product/buy-rhino-ag-rebel-rototiller-rhino-ago-rebel-rotary-tiller-for-sale/
Thanks for the quick response....you are doing a great job.
Bob
How much
How much
Are you kidding me? That tiller did that with no mowing? I was amazed! Basically it brush cut and graded all in ONE PASS! Mind explosion! I need that in my life! Instant garden beds.
i have a NH small 35 with a 60" woods tiller that would do the same thing a a lot less money
I would never do that. Use rotary cutter. Then tiller.
Depends on how much you want the life span if your equipment to be.
@@xrude7875so how much does your new holland tractor and your tiller or whatever cost then total?
@@xrude7875how do you know he didn’t get it free? Why does it matter how much money someone spent ?
That tractor and tiller combination works amazingly well. You can be sure that a slip-clutch is the ONLY way you can till that kind of ground and not spend all your time replacing shear pins. Results from a single pass with it were outstanding. Nice job, and good video.
Thanks for watching! Yes, slip clutch is a must have!
Hardened bolts we do it all the time
Yeah but grade 8 bolts are sorta defeating the purpose of sheer protection.
That tiller is AMAZING!
I’m amazed at how fast he’s going and how well the dirt is turning out.
Why? He's only going down about 2 inches into the soil.
Nice job. Makes all the difference with the right equipment. And amazingly made it thru the entire video without 20 UA-cam commercials. Thats a good day! Hopefully we see the results when plots are up
Haha, that's not supposed to happen! :)
@@GoodWorksTractors I can’t find this tiller anywhere
I'm in Northern Nevada (more rocks than soil) so I enjoy you guys posting a great tilling video... it's like plowing snow for me!
Rhino makes damn good product. Rotary cutters, scrape blades and now looks like a good tiller.
You should add a follow-up clip taken in the late Spring of 2021 to show if you efforts proved fair, good or excellent. Inquiring minds what to know.
Interesting video sir. Tiller did very well in the heavy vegetation. Looking really good
Have you considered Buchwheat for your cover crop? It is about the least expensive seed to buy, broadcast seeding or drill, will attract every pollinator, deer, turkey and other game birds in abundance. Buckwheat will grow fast in a short season, produce at least 30:1, usually more, reseeds itself. Adds Phosphorus to the soil, will grow in any kind or type of soil. You will not be disappointed.
Wow, that is one impressive tiller! I need to up my tractor game.
Wow. That tiller really does the job. Thank you for this video.
God bless
wooow this thing is so new, I can smell the paint thru my monitor :) good work
Keep on having that fun Master C. Looks great and as always you are the best at presenting our tools of the trade. 👍🙂
I appreciate it sir!
To say that this is impressive is an understatement.
Thanks for watching!
@@GoodWorksTractors who needs grass mowing when you can just till everything
We tilled about a 1/4 acre food plot with my 4066R and 6 ft tiller. We didn’t spray or cut the weeds first - just like you. It took me over two hours to pull all the weeds put of the tines afterwards. All them weeds get wrapped around there and you can’t rotate the tines without a crowbar. Makes it hard to connect the pto because you have to rotate the tines by hand to get the splines on the pto shaft to line up.
Take a look at the 4:30 mark. I haven't touched the underside of the tiller. Hardly a weed to be seen. ua-cam.com/video/3TlfSz-OAMk/v-deo.html
I can't wait to use one of those this Spring on 2 acres
Pretty impressive for a little tractor and rotovator. I used used to use 55-60 hp diesel tractors and 60”-72” rotovators. Grass would still get wound up in it and slow things down.
I went from an old yanmar tiller to a frontier tiller on my 2032R this fall. Boy what a difference.
That place is going to be a weed forest in about 1 month lol.
The deer don't seem to care at all.
Looks exactly like my Bush Hog RTG72 tiller. It's built like a tank. I switched mine to reverse till and love it that way but I don't have rocky soil. I run mine with a 45hp tractor.
I'm going to try a reverse rotation sometime, I just can't see how it could do better, but I gotta find out for myself! Thanks for watching! FYI, Rhino Ag's parent company bought Bush Hog roughly 11 years ago. alamo-group.com/investor-relations/press-releases/press-pages/alg-completes-acquisition-of-bush-hog.html
The reverse till leaves an even better seed bed. In my experience it covers the existing vegetation even better in a single pass. The downside is sticks are more likely to get stuck in the tines and it wants to throw rocks forward instead of jumping over them. Definitely don’t try it until you have the front guard installed. I made that mistake! Had dirt all over me and my tractor.
@@GoodWorksTractors Been my experience with forward tine tiller that in rocks I break a lot of bolts on the tines. I believe that reverse till would come up under the rocks and not break tines or bolts as bad.
I recently bought five acres of land, about three and a half to four of it is heavily wooded and I have started clearing it. I like the equipment that you are using, and this particular video, seem very cathartic. Not sure why.
Shell in palm beach gardens Florida here. I can't get enough of the videos you're doing. I literally watch all day long it seems when im online doing my stock market stuff. You should do a live cam thing over there. Id be on it all the time.
Thanks so much for the clip guy. i'm watch at Thailand.
The sounds of the engine and tiller put me to sleep. My 2 year old woke me up because I was snoring! Lol
🤣👍
VERY impressed with the results!
Thanks for watching!
Only one problem with this, as the roots of the weed still intact, the fields will look the same in a month or two or next spring...
Wow you took it through the woods , how does it do with the roots ? Great way to bang down fat ruts , you’re giving me ideas !
That seeder is one I would love to get one day.
Man that is absolutely beautiful!!!
Nice . It looks like it does a decent job for one path .
So much like Saturday morning cartoons I feel wrapped in warm and nostalgic feelings of yesteryear. That tiller is amazing - like Monster Movie Matinee - and waiting for the seeder sequel is like waiting for part 2 of Monster Movie Matinee!!! Outstanding camera work once again Courtney Spielberg!!! :) 👍
Ha, thanks Lea! Hope you have a good weekend!
Freaking amazing..we live in Florida so woods near us is no doubt a jungle...this would definitely be a major challenge..
You may find that you put a lot of weed seed in the ground also.
Yep, I'm sure I did. However, I'm not going for perfection here :)
Yeah. Sooner or later you're going to rebuilt the pto and transmission. Discings good enough
Great video. Awesome results. How much trouble did you have with vegetation buildup and vegetation wrapping around the shaft and times?
Surprisingly very little besides a few random vines I got into around the perimeter. The green, leafy stuff just shredded up.
Pretty impressive for a single pass! Could you front-mount a flail mower? Would make the tiller work less strenuous, as well as more evenly mixing in the organic matter.
Possibly, but it would have to be a hydraulically operated front flail and would be extremely expensive to setup. Thanks for watching!
@@GoodWorksTractors Indeed, if there's no front PTO and hitch, it would get expensive. Thanks for the video, I enjoyed it greatly.
We have that on ours but has a pro that shoots to the front then straight down for a mower and then towards the back but yeah
It's so much better if you will double cut. Instead of taking a full cut in that rough stuff, center your hood on the edge of the last cut each time. try it and you will see a much better job and it's easier on your equipment too.
Nice vid, what happen if you hit some 3 or 4 inch rocks with this tiller, big damage?
It has a slip clutch, so same thing that happens when a brush hog with slip clutch would hit a hidden stump. Clutch engages until the resistance passes and then back to operation.
Any footage of the food plots after they've grown? Any luck hunting?
Not enough footage to make a video, but did post a picture awhile back from a ground blind overlooking the plots. They came in great. Unfortunately, didn't have any luck this year. The right one didn't come along at the right time.
Plot looks perfect !!
Impressive! Really enjoyed watching it! Keep up the nice work! @Good Works Tractors
Outstanding video, glad I found it. I've watched a lot of food plot videos and was considering selling my tiller to get different equipment. Now I know to--till baby, till--thanks to the tractor channel I like. I have a 5 foot Bush Hog, identical to yours as you mentioned, that will be behind my 50 HP Kioti. I'll have some great plots.
How bad was the weed regen versus the plot seeds? I should have a bit more time so I'll likely give the weeds a week or two then spray and broadcast. Of course, given the cost of glyphosate this year...
As to the weed tangle everybody has mentioned, it appears that better designed tillers don't have as much of a problem thanks to shielding etc.
Pretty impressive. I like the brush attachment on the front and can't help but wonder if it would fit my JD 990?
Yes it will
In your view, and others can respond too, how well will the 60" work with the 1025r? Looking at the specs. It looks like that would be the max. For the tractor, is it one of those situations where "just because you can do it doesn't mean you should?" Thanks!!!
Well, I think it will handle it, but I wouldn't recommend it to my customers :)
It appears that the shortest one they make is 60" am I correct? I'm impressed by how well it does in one pass. Therefore, it must dig deeper than most others I've seen. My experience in working with hand rear tine and hiring others with 3 PT. tillers is they only go about 3 - 4" deep. I like to go deeper personally.
Yeah, 60" is the smallest in this series. 48" in their series down.
As a general rule: Try to stay above 3.5hp/foot for roto-tillers and you should be A-OK. This is dependent upon the working travel speed, but what implement isn't? 5x3.5=17.5 so I don't see why it wouldn't work for you. This is effected by so many things (soul condition, blade sharpness, etc.) that a simple equation doesn't fit all of the setups, but as a general rule - it seems to work.
Hope it helps! If you do end up running a 60" tiller on that machine, I'd be interested to see the results.
It will work (I used to have a mahindra 25hp with a 60" tiller) but it is pushing the tractor very hard and you have to go very slow. Had a lot of times the tractor wouldn't even maintain rpm and was bogging by about 500 ram even going slow. I have since moved to a 46hp with a 72" tiller and it is night and day - works so much better.
The 1st 5 minutes is like every hunters yearly claims. Lol. Sounds just like my brother and I.
You ain't seen rough until you've tried to till a field in my corner of CT!
Here! here! I am in NE CT and debating on a dozer or ground ripper/hoe for the larger rocks before I prep with a Harley rake.
There are fields in CT? I though it was all suburbia?
@@cs-rj8ru You're thinking of the Gold Coast - Fairfield & New Haven counties. The Connecticut river valley (aside from some pockets like Hartford) used to have extensive agricultural activities (think tobacco). A bit east & west there was/is a lot of dairy. When you get into my corner (Tolland & Windham counties) there still are a lot of what I'd call hard-scrabble farms, some that involve substantial acreage (by CT standards). Outside of the CT river valley the soil seems to grow rocks, most of which wreak havoc on plows & tillers, or poke up in the hay fields making it challenging to cut the grass. As the generations pass, many farms have surrendered to subdivisions to satisfy greedy heirs (it's more financially beneficial to grow houses rather than agricultural stuff).
This is exactly what I need will love to know the price
Watch a lot of your video's, they are great. Wanted to know if John Deere 4066R tractor will fit through a 8' garage door, I have tractor on order.
It will, but barely and could come down to the exact opening height, tire pressure, tire size. I've had some that rub the weather stripping, some that wouldn't fit until I lowered pressure. However, once I add liquid ballast, lower the psi a bit, I've never had an issue.
@@GoodWorksTractors Thanks
This machine is great, we need one ✌️🇮🇶🇮🇶✌️🇮🇶🇮🇶🙋🙋🙋
So went looking for the results video, none to be found. At least append this one with the progress, post as UPDATED. The tiller works well, impressive.
One pass with a roto-tiller does more than several passes with a disk.
I agree.
I have a jd and frontier tiller. Works great.
I do like that rototiller.
Wow, great video! I have around 5 acres that I have ran the discs on/box scrape and rock rake and want to smooth out from years of being tilled and planted with corn and sunflowers for doves. It was never smoothed out between years and it’s pretty rough but very good soft topsoil. Would this dig enough to fill the ruts created? I made a drag out of some old power poles and chain link that I could run after using this if you think it would fill/cut out the ruts enough to be level. I’ve been debating on getting a soil pulverized until I saw your video. Thanks for any help!!
Excellent job! Does better then walk behind tillers. Your tiller thinks it’s a rock crusher!
Haha, yeah it really ripped right through everything!
We only do organic, “no till” food plots for whitetail, bear, and most anything.
so what.
@@TheSoloAsylum I guess your IQ doesn’t allow you to see the irony in your comment or the humor in mine.
Awsome video. Since you don't spray before seeding. Won't this just grow into weeds and grass ?
Weeds come in, but the plots do really well. These aren't production crops, the deer haven't complained yet about a few weeds here and there :)
Mow first. You won't lose any vegetation to be plowed under but will save huge wrapping and plugging of the times.
I had zero build up issues on the tiller or in the ground. Plus, if you watched the video, then you heard me say I had zero time this year and wanted to mow and spray first, but ran out of time.
Just found this vid,
Any chance you could del the cost of the jd tractor, + all hook up equipment, shafts ,links etc.
And detail cost on the tillerunit.
I'm looking for a set up equal unit.
For my farm needs .
Well let's see whats available.
Thanks
i don't know why you wouldn't want to bush hog first...but it did go right thru it pretty good....none the less
Did you watch it on mute? I explain that I had no time this fall, so making due. Worked out amazingly well. Plots came in good and deer feasting on them every day.
@@GoodWorksTractors ahh...no time.....I can relate
Chewed that up nicely
If you mow those tall weeds before you till it I'm pretty sure you'll be happier with the outcome.😊
great vid, I have a Rhino 850 8' hyd scraper blade it's built like a tank
Hi there,
I'm stuck in a bit of a predicament. Got a few acres in alfalfa and can't find anyone reliable to cut the crop for me and I won't spend thousands of dollars on buying haying equipment so thought of using my rototiller to only cut and pulverize the plant portion of the crop without touching the ground. I'd make sure my tiller is lifted at least 2-3 inches off the ground at all times so it's not damaging the root and only mowing/mulching the stalk/plant. I'd do that over the course of the summer 3 times and just let the cut field rot and decompose over the winter.
I know this is not ideal but would you think a HD rototiller can give nearly as good of a finished product as a flail mower or not?
Thanks for your time and hope to get your insights on this.
Hey Kevin, no, it's not going to work. That really isn't how a tiller works. Plus, blade speed (tip speed) is not anywhere near fast enough to cut hay with a tiller.
@@GoodWorksTractors My ultimate goal is not cutting for baling or anything, it's only to knock it down and mulch into usable matter and let it decompose over winter. Of course, I'll be doing it X 3 this summer so we shall see how it goes but I'm trying it on a small test patch first.
Not concerned about my crop but I can't spend a $100,000 on haying machinery just to support such small field. I know it's not ideal, but sometimes you gotta work with what you have.
And ty for the prompt reply!
I wonder how well that would work in rocky soil? Most of the soil I have has large potato sized rocks, some rocks even larger.
Looks like it has no problem with (small) branches and large twigs.
Great episode Courtney - With the that tractor & the Rhino Tiller you certainly made short work of this project - So when can you come to Tennessee and do my overgrown field for my miniature donkeys....lol - I looked at the 5 ft. version of the Rhino on your website - Will my 1025r have enough power to run it...?
Unfortunately, it requires 25HP at the PTO...I will say I've ran 60" tillers on the 1023e and the 1025r. Not saying I recommend it, but I always had success running that setup believe it or not.
Wow that tiller looks awesome...works better than my unit. Do you think the 4066 can handle the 84" tiller?
thanks, Bob
Yes, absolutely! Thanks for watching!
What is the suggested hp for the 84" tiller? thanks, Bob
Says 45-65HP at the PTO
H
I got a 15,000 pound tiller for my 1,000 series challenger tractor. I can chew up anything lol and I only run 0.6 mph
Rototillers are the best things since Swiss cheese. since I got mine I can do all my food plots in one day that used to take me three and they leave the ground looking silky smooth just incredible. one question you are doing a lot of turning while running your tiller I was told and my tillers manual States you should never turn with the tiller in the ground I think the reason being that it will tear up the bearings or maybe bend the blades?
I've always done it, maybe I shouldn't. However, never had any issues either.
That’s a great piece of kit
That sucker really chews, but logically (mathematically), it should.
Compared to my setup (1023e+647 tiller) running 3.75hp/foot (which chews quite nicely already) you've got 8.67hp/foot. So with that in mind, there's not a lot that will stand in the way of that.
Pure Destruction! :)
@@GoodWorksTractors DESTRUCTION!!
lol. Day made.
Hp per foot? Lool second level gets even dumber. Go watch Welker Farms, or Millenial Farmer! Lool
@@coffindancer38 you don't like the way I measure my power? It seems to be working just fine for me. If it doesn't work for you then use whatever system you prefer, but there's really no need to be a dick about it.
A more insightful comment might include how you suggest measuring power, rather than a list of the channels that you like.
I have a 6 foot tiller for my Ford 3000 diesel tractor it's amazing on new ground
Nobody asked
Your definitely a little beauty too
@@davidward6626 Wasn’t expecting that lol thank you tho
I want to use mine for this, but I worry how many roots & rocks I’ll find. Mine’s an older Befco model. I’d have to take a pocket full of shear pins I suppose.
Love your channel buddy. Please don't stop selling tractors no matter how much money you make from youtube videos. :-)
How about leveling ground to improve hay field? Will this work to do that ?
Yes, it will definitely help.
@@GoodWorksTractors Any dealers involved in lease arrangements...Near zip 32054...
was this for clearing land only? tilling and chopping in 1 pass, not bad.
Nem fogyaszt benzint mégis mindent tövig rád
the video said 66HP. Is that at the P.T.O? I ask because I have a 1995 Ford 5030 with claimed 65Hp at the P.T.O. Can the 72 inch tiller be used with 65ish HP? would you risk damaging the gearbox? I am interested in this tiller but that is a lot of money only to damage it with too much HP on the unit. thanks for any reply or suggestions.
Did it turn the ground easily because it was already soft or can it do it to hard ground?
What happens when you hit a rock. Is there a slip clutch or shear pin?
Slip clutch is standard.
Dang the new farming simulator dlc is looking realistic af
I love equipment
Just subbed. I like your channel. I really like when you demo different attachments... BUT... ever thought about adding some red to your tractor offerings? Haha. Great content, sir!
What is the brand name? So does the 25 hp tractor can handle this one?
The same thing will come. Back next year won't. it?
Good Mecin. good all proyek...👍👍👍🇮🇩🇮🇩
What brand is that tiller and how fast were you going
Nice job , how deep are you going?
About 5"-6" here. Pretty deep as I wanted to get through the roots from all this overgrowth. I normally don't find the need to till this deep though.
when you say mulcher on your skid steer; are you referring to a flail mower?
Sold the drill, thats why i didnt hear back from you.
Yeah, sorry sold out now unfortunately
Very impressive
Great for making a garden
Can I have a simple of this? 😬😬
Amazing tiller...is it reverse rotation?
This one is forward, but they do make reverse rotation in this series.
amazing till job great veidio
olo
Great video as usual. Did you get a shot of the tiller after eating all that stuff? I just did that and my tiller is all kinds of stopped up. I'm looking for a good way to clean it all out. Suggestions?
Yeah, here's a video of me planting that field right after I tilled. ua-cam.com/video/0Em88RU_e2w/v-deo.html
Shall put camera at vichles,so video more interesting to view