I bought 30 acres below my 40, and it has a spring that tests good to drink, has a pipe sticking out/all developed, and puts out over 17,000 gallons per day. Only problem is, where I could use the water for irrigating is uphill 300 vertical feet and 2,000 lineal away. A Grundfos SQ Flex pump and about 650 watts of solar will handle that just fine, I've installed many of them before back when I was in the solar biz (sideline), and I should get around 2,000 GPD. Once up there, gravity will move it all around where ever I need it. 12" or 16" deep will be fine, summer use only, draining it will be easy.
NO rocks, and if I custom order the poly line, I can get it in a single length, reel mounted. I see others have fabbed up a sweep 90 of various sorts, (muffler tubing, EMT etc.) attached to the rear of the ripper, and once started the pipe will feed in thru the top and lay in the trench behind the ripper as it goes. I imagine the poly has to be secured somehow when starting. I can see the biggest hassle being wrestling the roll to get it to feed correctly into the 90, that's why the extra cost of the reel seems worth it, I could fab some sort of reel holder, maybe trailer mounted or even in the pickups flatbed, to follow along. Anyone else lay poly line this way? I have a receiver hitch 3 point attachment, and am thinking of using it, with the right sub soiler tool inserted in it. 16 years ago I hired someone (??) to lay my electrical line about 1200', he had a good sized dozer and was easily and quickly able to neatly bury it using a similar tool, just bigger so a lot deeper. I have a L3301 so would like to use it if feasible.
Just read a review, seems that without a lot of weight or hydraulic downforce, a small tractor may struggle to get the required down force, to get it even 12" deep. This may be a case of the cheapest and best way to do it is to get a bigger machine, and while it was at it get it down 16" or so. I will check around local and see who I can rustle up that lays poly this way and is all set up for it, and see what equipment they use.
NO rocks, and if I custom order the poly line, I can get it in a single length, reel mounted. I see others have fabbed up a sweep 90 of various sorts, (muffler tubing, EMT etc.) attached to the rear of the ripper, and once started the pipe will feed in thru the top and lay in the trench behind the ripper as it goes. I imagine the poly has to be secured somehow when starting. I can see the biggest hassle being wrestling the roll to get it to feed correctly into the 90, that's why the extra cost of the reel seems worth it, I could fab some sort of reel holder, maybe trailer mounted or even in the pickups flatbed, to follow along. Anyone else lay poly line this way? I have a receiver hitch 3 point attachment, and am thinking of using it, with the right sub soiler tool inserted in it. 16 years ago I hired someone (??) to lay my electrical line about 1200', he had a good sized dozer and was easily and quickly able to neatly bury it using a similar tool, just bigger so a lot deeper. I have a L3301 so would like to use it if feasible.
Just read a review, seems that without a lot of weight or hydraulic downforce, a small tractor may struggle to get the required down force, to get it even 12" deep. This may be a case of the cheapest and best way to do it is to get a bigger machine, and while it was at it get it down 16" or so. I will check around local and see who I can rustle up that lays poly this way and is all set up for it, and see what equipment they use.
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