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John Deere 7000 no-till coulters

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Joe

01-25-2003 08:30:26




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What are 7000 no till coulters worth? Thanks for all replies. Joe




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Joe

01-27-2003 06:23:50




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 Re: John Deere 7000 no-till coulters in reply to Joe, 01-25-2003 08:30:26  
Thanks to both of the replies, Joe



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andy

01-26-2003 17:38:21




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 Re: John Deere 7000 no-till coulters in reply to Joe, 01-25-2003 08:30:26  
You very well may know this. There are two kinds of no-till coulters. First, there is a coulter that bolts directly to the planting unit with four bolts. This was called the heavy duty no-till coulter. I have seen these bring $75.00 to $100 a unit. I think you should have the heavy duty down pressure springs to make these go in the ground right. One thing about the unit mounted coulter is that is cuts the right depth all of the time. Off of the top of my head I believe they are to be 1/2 inch deeper than the seed opener coulters. THE OTHER type of no-till coulter is mounted to the frame where the planting units mount. Two flat bars come down from the main planter beam and hold the coulter. Two springs apply down pressure. These coulters are cheap ... I have seen them go for less than $25.00 a unit. In my opinion they work fine. I have a planter with these on it. The books call these min-till coulters. One problem I see is that when you let the planter down they really go in the ground. Some of the experts say that you can leave too much of a slot and then the seed sort of settles down into it ... in effect planting too deep. I have JD planting units with the unit mounted coulters and have had trouble getting them in the ground ... with no heavy duty down pressure springs. I am putting heavy duty down pressure springs on those units. Either works fine although it seems like everyone wants the unit mounted units which makes them pricey.

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farmer jones

01-25-2003 18:39:32




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 Re: John Deere 7000 no-till coulters in reply to Joe, 01-25-2003 08:30:26  
I don't know what they are worth but may need to buy 16



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