Well you tilled it too deep and brought the grass clumps back up. The issue is what type of planter do you have??? If it has a shoe type opener your going to have troubles in that the grass clumps will drag in front of the shoe. IF your using a newer type planter that has double disk opener then let a rain firm up the soil and plant.
Truthfully a tiller makes the ground to loose/mellow for a planter to work very well. Four to six inches of "fluff" is not a good seed bed. The depth control will sink in the loose ground. So your seed will be planted too deep. Also ground that is worked real fine will make a hard crust if you get heavy rains and then dry weather after. The seed will not be able to break through the crust.
So if you work the ground again only go a few inches deep. Any deeper and you will just bring up more clumps. Your landscape rake will drag them off if you have some where to go with the clumps.
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Today's Featured Article - The Ferguson System Principal An implement cutting through the soil at a certain depth say eight inches requires a certain force or draft to pull it. Obviously that draft will increase if the implement runs deeper than eight inches, and decrease if it runs shallower. Why not use that draft fact to control the depth of work automatically? The draft forces are
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