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No till drill
No till drill











no till drill

Not compatible in dual gauge wheel applications. The wheel is serviceable along with other parts.

#NO TILL DRILL SERIES#

These wheels are compatible with both 90 Series openers on seeding tools and planter row-units.īelow is a chart that demonstrates a competitive advantage over MudSmith™ wheels for mud and residue flow: This spoked gauge wheel has shown exceptional performance within these areas as well. Some growers provided feedback of crop residue getting inside and jamming up the gauge wheel and opener. Heavy trash fields from no-till environments have also tested very well with the spoked gauge wheel. Simply remove the snap ring, replace the bearing, and place the snap ring back. Another improvement over the closed gauge wheel is a snap-ring bearing retention. Optional wheel kit (weight 300 lbs.) includes hydraulic cylinders, hoses and 2x18x9.5-8 ply tires. This allows for smaller spokes, creating larger open surface area for mud and debris to flow more easily than competitor’s wheels. Description: Genesis 3 3 No-Till Drill 36 working width 5 planting rows with 7.5 Spacing and 4.8 Bushel Capacity Seed Box. The wheel also has cast spokes and bearing hubs for increased strength. Its features include serviceable, stamped inner and outer rims. The spoked gauge wheel is designed for optimum performance. The spoked gauge wheel is a solution for operators who plant in these conditions to allow the mud and debris that get caught behind the depth gauge wheel to easily flow through the wheel and continue providing superior depth performance. This creates the possibility of the depth gauge wheel or opener disk to seize up and drag through the soil. Nice drill, row units are tight, No Till, 7.5' spacing, small seed box, only 2800 acres, clean drill ready to go, can arrange trucking if needed about 1.50 loaded mile. Those operators have experienced poor performance from wet soils working in between the depth gauge wheel and the opener disk and not having a way out. Operators have been forced to plant in wet conditions that are far from optimal in order to plant within the optimum planting window. Growers have historically had to make some difficult planting and seeding decisions due to weather.













No till drill