That’s the same disk that I started with. Did an excellent job but would get you stuck in a heartbeat. Our land was creek bottom and would trick you looking dry on top but wet underneath. Pulled it with a 530 which I still have.
We lived and farmed along side the St. FRANCIS SUNKEN LANDS IN NORTHEAST ARKANSAS AND IN THE EARLY SPRING PRIOR TO 1960 WHEN THE SEEP DITCH WAS DUG. The seep water from the flood way would cause problems in the spring, you could use a breaking plow and get enough support on the top to pull a breaking plow but, by the time you made your first round the furrow from the first through would have filled with seep water. An old friend told me that we had some of the most productive ground in the country because we had a tendency to receive the benefit of sub surface irrigation at times.
Can't believe he's running in that rough plowed ground with a loader on. Risking breaking the front end, beating up the seals on the loader, and causing unnecessary soil compacgion. Just wrong!!