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While the trend towards ever lengthening
gangs of disc harrows continues apace, Dominic Kilburn looks
at a lighter and more compact tractor-mounted option available.
"Size isn't everything," someone
once said about something.
The same can't be said for the trailed disc
harrow market in recent years where, on the face of it, size
is everything.
Visitors to last year's Tillage events in
Lincolnshire and Gloucestershire would have seen the latest
in large disc technology followed by double presses being trawled
around the sites by equally large high horsepowered tractors.
And, as reduced tillage thinking currently plays on the minds
of most arable farmers in the UK, this over-sized kit has certainly
found its niche on farms around the country.
Visitors to the same events might also have
seen a tractor- mounted disc harrow being put through its paces.
Already a familiar sight in the smaller (Vari-Disc Duo) version,
of which over 500 units have now been sold, the weightier Vari-Disc Quad performs a more aggressive job in the field and achieves a better
mixing action than its smaller brother, says manufacturer Opico.
The concept of this Dutch-designed machine
is simple enough. A linkage-mounted heavy duty 140 x 80mm box-section
frame supporting four rows of angled scalloped-discs- 28 discs
for the 3.0m Vari-Disc Quad and 32 for the 3.4m version. Each disc
(with 425mm spacing) is independently suspended while each row
is manually adjusted to the desired cutting angle.
At the rear of the implement a standard
crumbler roller or optional flexi-coil roller is fitted for
adjustable depth control and consolidation. The roller's width
slightly exceeds that of the discs to ensure the full width
is covered.
Opico's managing director, Jeremy Coleclough
believes the Vari-Disc Quad's strength lies with its aggressive
soil moving capabilities. "We think it competes directly
with traditional discs, but gives a better mixing action,"
he says.
Although lightweight in comparison to other
discs, the Vari-Disc Quad has a weight variation from 1800-2180kg
(depending on which model) and a minimum power requirement of
110hp.
Straight in after harvest
Charles Smallwood of RK and CE Smallwood,
farms with his father Ken at the Homestead, Sutton-on-Derwent
near York. He purchased his 3m WH300 Vari-Disc Quad in time for
autumn cultivations in 1997.
Mr Smallwood's combinable crops include
winter wheat, barley, and rape while protein beans are grown
for the farm's herd of beef cattle. The soil type is mainly
heavy but includes a mixture of black sands.
The Vari-Disc Quad goes straight in after harvest
of all crops, prior to ploughing, and usually twice over for
rape stubble. On occasions it is used to break down the soil
after the plough, says Mr Smallwood. "In 1997 the ground
was really hard and we'd tried other discs and cultivators which
hardly left a mark," he explains. "We just set up
the Vari-Disc Quad and it literally pulled the discs down into the
soil. If anything we had to re-adjust to prevent too much disc-to-soil
contact."
Burial of trash and weeds from the mixing
action is superb, maintains Mr Smallwood. "The versatility
of having four rows of discs on one implement means that one
pass with the Vari-Disc Quad equates to two passes with conventional
two-row discs.
"Blockages are rare in comparison with
conventional discs mainly because there's no axle and adequate
disc spacing. If there is a build-up of trash then it's easy
to just raise the implement on the linkage and it drops out,"
he adds.
Mr Smallwood operates the Vari-Disc Quad disc cultivator at
a 4.5" depth and at 5mph-plus speeds with a 110hp 2640
Massey Ferguson tractor. He reckons that on a really good day
he could complete up to 40 acres. "Going faster doesn't
change its performance - no ground within its width is left
unturned and, as many of our fields are long and narrow, the
additional speed and manoeuvrability both in the field and for
road transport is an advantage," he says.
With many farmers recently suffering the
consequences of using heavy equipment on wet land, Mr Smallwood
believes he has the answer with the Vari-Disc Quad. "Compaction
is of great concern to us and in the wet we stay well clear
of the land with big machinery but can run the Vari-Disc Quad without
causing soil damage or clogging up. If necessary we'll run it
without the crumbler roller to lighten the load."
The Vari-Disc Quad has also proved a great levelling
tool on uneven land and in some years producing good seedbeds
straight after the plough - completely replacing the power harrow.
"Other disc cultivators have the expense of requiring another implement
to prepare a bed properly," he says.
Maintenance is simple, he continues with
discs, bushes and bearings readily accessible and quick to change.
"I just get hold of each disc and see if there is any movement.
"It's a versatile, simple and low cost
implement to run. Being robust it should last for years, saving
us money at times when it replaces the power harrow and reducing
down time from minimal maintenance.
Chop and bury straw
John and Geoff Hardy have diversified in
every sense of the word. They farm 450 arable acres, pigs on
contract, have a caravan holiday park and , since 1991, opened
Hardy's Animal Farm to the public.
Gray's Farm is situated on Lincolnshire's
east coast at Ingoldmells, featuring a clay loam predominently
on the heavier side, says John Hardy.
Problems with smoke-filled caravans had
prompted the Hardys' to chop and bury straw long before the
straw burning ban came in and, according to Mr Hardy, it is
all part of the process of gradually rebuilding the soil's fertility
since it was flooded by sea water in the 1953 storms.
"We previously only used a plough and
furrow cracker to bury the straw and trash prior to creating
a seedbed, so we tried a Vari-Disc Quad disc cultivator in 1997. We were told to
go twice over the winter wheat stubble, which we did diagonally
across the tramlines, and it worked. All the trash was buried,
it was left to mulch and then drilled with a Lely Polymat combi."
Mr Hardy says that to keep a good cultivation
balance on the farm, the Vari-Disc Quad (pulled by a 135hp MF 8110)
is used instead of the plough in two out of every three seasons
and occasionally, in wet autumns, a shallow subsoiler follows
the Vari-Disc Quad. "There's a financial saving to be made
in ploughing less," he adds.
Using Nix as a guide for fixed/machinery
costs, the Hardys' reckon on about £28/ha saving where
the Vari-Disc Quad is used before drilling and rolling compared
with the farm's more traditional approach of plough, cultivate
twice (with a Sampo cultivator), drill and roll - see table
below.
Time saving is also a factor, says Mr Hardy
as the Vari-Disc Quad increases the farm's working window from combine
to drilling. "It works best across the line of the combine
- avoiding the worst of the straw - and the mixing action is
ideal for breaking the soil down at a good speed. We wanted
something that would mix the soil well with average horsepower
- it's no good having a 250hp tractor in the shed for most of
the year," he adds.
This season Mr Hardy has also noticed a
reduction in chemical usage for autumn weed control. "One
pass with the Vari-Disc Quad produced such a good flush of weeds
that we achieved a much better initial hit with the Sting Eco.
As far as black grass is concerned the pressure on chemicals
to cope with it has been reduced."
For the future, Mr Hard sees the Vari-Disc Quad disc cultivator continuing as an integral part of the farm's cultivation programme,
but believes it may work in tandem with a Free-Flow-type reduced
tillage drill in a effort to drive cultivation costs down still
further.
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Cultivation costings at Gray's Farm
Ingoldmells
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Plough & furrow cracker
Sampo cultivator x 2
combi/drill
roll
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Vari-Disc Quad x 2
sub-soil x 1
combi/drill
roll
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Vari-Disc Quad x 2
combi/drill
roll
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£115.25/ha
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£116.89/ha
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£87.89/ha
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Article taken from Arable Farming
January 29th 2000
For Information on the OPICO Vari-Disc Quad click here - 
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