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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Tedder Setup
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<blockquote data-quote="Texasmark" data-source="post: 1586686" data-attributes="member: 27848"><p>I go to the field and stop, kick in the PTO with the tedder raised and slowly lower it till it's skimming the ground as M-5 mentioned then just barely backing off till I quit digging any dirt. If you have a dirty pasture, like it had a bush hog run over it the previous year and lots of brown clippings under your hay then set it and your rake just above the old clippings.</p><p></p><p>A slight angle of maybe 5 degrees is required to keep the rear of the machine from re-stirring your good clippings once they have been scattered by the front of it. The lower the output of the rear of the tines, the wider the area mixed....just do the best you can conscious of both extremes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Texasmark, post: 1586686, member: 27848"] I go to the field and stop, kick in the PTO with the tedder raised and slowly lower it till it's skimming the ground as M-5 mentioned then just barely backing off till I quit digging any dirt. If you have a dirty pasture, like it had a bush hog run over it the previous year and lots of brown clippings under your hay then set it and your rake just above the old clippings. A slight angle of maybe 5 degrees is required to keep the rear of the machine from re-stirring your good clippings once they have been scattered by the front of it. The lower the output of the rear of the tines, the wider the area mixed....just do the best you can conscious of both extremes. [/QUOTE]
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