Recommendation on Tiller Size for B2301

tm7554

New member

Equipment
B2301
Jul 31, 2017
3
0
0
Metamora, MI
New B2301 and wanting to put in a few large food plots in for deer. Just brush hogged the field and small willows this weekend. I purchased a 4' brush hog and kinda wished I had purchased the 5'.

So Now its time to till and I was leaning toward the 4' tiller but now I'm thinking maybe a 5' would be better. I have time on my side as this is my personal property and tractor and implements are parked here. However, ground hasn't been tilled in years from what I can see. Mostly pasture and willow thickets. I know the 4' is likely more appropriate but could I take my time with the 5' tiller and make it work? Thought being I could easily keep tilling often as the tractor and implements are on this land and in the future (after ground is broken) it might be more pleasant and timely to run the 5'.

Thanks for any insight here.
 
Oct 8, 2014
623
5
16
oregon
I run a 6' on an L4740. It gets hot and I've got loam with no rocks or roots. The tractor gets pretty hot too. Not overheated but hot.
 

Utopia Texas

Member

Equipment
Kubota B2650/Kubota L6060
Jun 14, 2017
110
3
18
Brookshire & Cat Spring, Texas
If you are just going to put in oats or rye for the deer the soil does not need to be pulverized as you can do with a tiller. Most grass seeds are planted an inch deep or less. If the ground is not rock hard a disc/disk would do the trick and use a lot less diesel and time. A tiller though great in some situations may be overkill for a deer food plot.
 

tm7554

New member

Equipment
B2301
Jul 31, 2017
3
0
0
Metamora, MI
If you are just going to put in oats or rye for the deer the soil does not need to be pulverized as you can do with a tiller. Most grass seeds are planted an inch deep or less. If the ground is not rock hard a disc/disk would do the trick and use a lot less diesel and time. A tiller though great in some situations may be overkill for a deer food plot.
Exactly the application. Small food plot. Thanks
 

Spurlucky

New member

Equipment
Kubota MX5200, loader, Backhoe w, hydraulic thumb
Apr 19, 2015
26
0
0
Berkshire County, MA, USA
New B2301 and wanting to put in a few large food plots in for deer. Just brush hogged the field and small willows this weekend. I purchased a 4' brush hog and kinda wished I had purchased the 5'.

So Now its time to till and I was leaning toward the 4' tiller but now I'm thinking maybe a 5' would be better. I have time on my side as this is my personal property and tractor and implements are parked here. However, ground hasn't been tilled in years from what I can see. Mostly pasture and willow thickets. I know the 4' is likely more appropriate but could I take my time with the 5' tiller and make it work? Thought being I could easily keep tilling often as the tractor and implements are on this land and in the future (after ground is broken) it might be more pleasant and timely to run the 5'.

Thanks for any insight here.
I have a MX5200 and most of its work is putting in food plots for friends & family. I run a 6' and am happy it covers the tire tracks. Sure is an excellent attachment. I'd say go with the 5' if your tractor's HP rating can handle that particular implement. Like other have said, the first time would be rough. In fact I would run a plow through it first to break it up. Good luck!
 

Kingcreek

Member

Equipment
Grand L3010 GST 4wd, LA481FEL, various attachments and accessories
Aug 3, 2011
457
2
18
NW Illinois
The first factor most people think of is power. The next thing they should consider is the weight of the tiller compared to the weight of their tractor. If they have power but not the weight to counter it they get bounced around a lot. Something close to track width is nice if the tractor will handle it.