And 856 with a M&W hair dryer is probably turning 115-120 horse and a seven shank with 4 inch twisted shovels will work well as long as you have a full rack of ft. weights loaded tires and duals . one other thing is tire size , if it has 18.4 x 38's or is it down on 18.4 x34's . You should be able to run first high in descent ground around 8-10 inches deep. My 806 will run a 9 shank straight shovel eight to ten inches deep but it is a three point . We are now DEEP ripping with a barn yard engineered Land Doll disc chisel that now had five DMI parabolic Tiger shanks with seven a half inch Tiger points and five or six inch upper shank shovels and going down thirteen inches or in other words five to six inches into the clay behind a 1066 that is tweaked and weighs in at around 18500 . now normally we can run first high , but Wednesday was not the case as i was ripping one ten acre field that we had chopped corn on when it was to wet in the rain and the wagon tracks in places would take you from 6-7 MPH to 0 in the blink of and eye . I had the pony power but was lacking traction and weight even with the duals .
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulic Basics - Part 2 - by Curtis Von Fange. In the last entry to this series we gave a brief overview of hydraulic system theory, its basic components and how it works. Now lets take a look at some general maintenance tips that will keep our system operating to its fullest potential. The two biggest enemies to a hydraulic system are dirt and water. Dirt can score the insides of cylinders, spool valves and pumps. Wate
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