ROME TRCW24 Offset Disc working fresh ground in Western Manitoba with sod, roots and rocks to deal with. The land was cleared and the trees were removed for the disk to work.
Eu ja vi esse video inumeras vezes e não me canso de ver,que grade ignorante de boa e grande e que trator bruto de força. ..Serviço igual esse ai não ve todo dia não. ...
ROME recommends a working speed of between 2.5mph-3.5mph on all of their offset disks. This maximizes the working potential of the offset disk and reduces damages because the disks are engineered to work at the recommended speeds. In the video there are a lot of underground rock that the disk is riding over so we were always cautious of that when we were working.
Dont get to excited boys ,, Bonel Farm Machinary in Queensland , Australia used to make Offset Discs like that back in the 90's , looks like a B60, 24 plate with 26 inch scalloped discs,, If I remember the smallest was a 20 plate all the way up to a 140 plate folding that the grain farmers used to use,,
Taking everything that tractor has for traction to pull that in the low spots. I have an old ROME disk and i dont have the tires on it instead it folds to reduce cutting.
I live in Georgia near where those discs are built. Think I would use a Cat to pull it with. No way would I put that tractor in new ground. One stump or rock between those duals and you can do a lit of damage quickly.
Nope. Not even close. Rome Plow Company in Rome, Ga. made the famous Rome Plows which Army Land Clearing companies used to clear jungle with. The plows were an offset V on the front with a stinger mounter off center to split trees and brush. The Caterpillar D-8 tractors were sometimes tied together with huge ship anchor chain bolted to their rear pintles. Three or four of those tractors moving through an area could do a lot of damage.
No, that was the K/G clearing blade by Rome. Check out my tractors at "Cat D7E with Rome K/g blade clearing, Stump splitting with D7G and Rome K/G blade, and Cat D7E clearing
You can make a big mess with a disc like that if you don't cut out your lands right. Either go around the field to the right and leave a big dead furrow in the middle or cut out a strip and go around to the left with the land getting bigger leaving the dead furrow between each land.
Le falta que agarre un corte parejo para que mueva bien la tierra porque hay partes que no agarra bien la Rastra en México le llamamos Ratra es una maquinaria pero el operador no es bueno
We have a 20" Case IH off set disc we pull with a Caterpillar rubber tracked tractor. One pass on mature pasture grass is all you need to kill it. It is not nearly as heavy as this ROME unit either. Tonge height is supper important on these offset machines as too high or low will steer the disc to the left or the right. It works much better behind a tracked machine as without the slip, the draw bar height is much more constant, and therefore much easier to set to get it straight behind the tractor.
I hate to disillusion you - but anyone who owns farm land and allows timber to grow will eventually have the land "taken" by new carbon-sink regulations. So then you will have to watch out for HEL (highly erodible land), CWA regulated wet area and now climate change pro-timber rules coming. And you will not be able to harvest the timber either - just watch it grow as you pay the taxes on the land. (Some of the prettiest wetlands were destroyed in the years leading up to 1986 swamp buster regs when doing so was still "legal".) And there are actually numerous government programs and instructional material from the decades-long era when farmers were actually encouraged to drain swampland. But so what? Try digging a well in your suburban lot's yard and see how many violations you get.
Yes it will go in the ground deeper than a plow faster than a plow because you don't have to make land if you do make a land with these you always have to turn to the left it's easier on the hitch and also the blades to the outside left corner from breaking if you leave it in the ground when you're making a turn
I feel sorry for the guy that has to disk behind him I have disked behind a john deere cutting disk and dam its rough its like going behind a breaking plow it will beat your ass off
Seems kind of a waste to just push the trees up in a pile. Could they not have been cut for a paper mill or lumber yard? Doesn't burning a large pile like that damage the soil around it? Perhaps they could be shredded into mulch or something like that.
Rajan Thind Actually it’s not, the size of the tractor allows for slow speed but still allows high levels of torque and the ability to pull the offset disc.
Probably rocks. Many sre just under the surface so you cant see them. I use a disc in conjuntion witha heavy narrow chisel plow. Its good at bringing the rocks to the surfa e so they can be dealth with
He seems to be dicing randomly there are strips and patches left all over the place now he’s got to go over it again..seems very inefficient...should spell discing 👍
What are you on about you idiot ? Hes going slow because of all the rocks that are buried, you can hear them grinding against the discs. I suppose a dickhead like you would go flat out and then blame the discs because they're all bent and the rig is in the workshop getting repaired. It's you who hasn't got a clue tosser!!
@@avafw60 Go screw yourself you freakin idiot! I've pulled a disc over more ground than you ever could imagine. Don't post you can't take a reply! Moron!!!
Ó o tanto que o brasileiro é atrasado eles acham que trator bom é aquele que puxa o implemento correndo igual formula 1e não sabe que existe uma lógica velocidade x consumo x qualidade do serviço o povo atrasado só.
@@leonelsouzagomes2437 uma grade florestal onde o objetivo é cortar raízes, para a limpeza do terreno. E os atrasados como vc disse falando merda de monte.