I could see where the small Troy might do that. I forgot to add I have
dual direction tines. When I put the transmission in forward and the
tines in reverse, it plows like a champ.
http://www.celestialhabitats.com
Cliff wrote:
=
I have a front tine and it does good in either areas which have never b=
een
tilled or previously worked areas. I used my son-in-laws rear tine on =
some
hard ground and found it wanted to walk over the area without doing muc=
h
tilling, driven by the tines not the wheels. This was the small Troy b=
uilt
so weight might have something to do with that. With the front tine I =
can
control the depth of tilling and the forward speed.
=
"J Kolenovsky" wrote in message
...
I'm starting a native plant consulting and design business and an Aggie=
friend says for me to buy a real good rear-tine tiller as opposed to a
front-tine. I have only had experience with front-tine. The rear-tine
with forward/reverse gears and powered transmissions look like precisio=
n
equipment and worth the money invested.
=
Any comments?
--
J Kolenovsky, A+, Network +, MCP
=F4=BF=F4 - http://www.hal-pc.org/~garden/reference.html
-- =
J Kolenovsky, A+, Network +, MCP
=F4=BF=F4 -
http://www.hal-pc.org/~garden/reference.html