Round and round has been used in haymaking because cutting and baling gear is offset to the tractor and in the case of balers you only should make right hand turns to save wear and tear on your PTO. A lot of rakes were also rigged for right turns This has changed a bit with in line balers etc. as it does not matter which way you turn. However, if you always have hay feeding into the baler, that would be the most efficent way. As for other operations like planting etc. , I've seen a number of studies over the years about field work patterns and the upshot is the most efficient way is up and down and the more square the field the better it is. It does take a bit more skill on the part of the operator to maintain productivity but that is where you earn your money; on the turns. Where you lose when going round is the time it takes to run the corners off.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Traction - by Chris Pratt. Our first bout with traction problems came when cultivatin with our Massey-Harris Pony. Up till then, this tractor had been running a corn grinder and pulling a trailer. It had new unfilled rear tires and no wheel weights. The garden was already sprouting when we hooked up the mid-mount shovel cultivators to the Pony. The seed bed was soft enough that the rear end would spin and slowly work its way to the downhill side of the gardens slight incline. From this, we learned our lesson sinc
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