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7 answers

I have a craftsman that works well. I think a rear-tine unit is the way to go though, no matter which brand you choose.

2007-04-16 03:38:23 · answer #1 · answered by gardengirl0423 2 · 1 0

Ariens is probably one of the leaders in the roto-tiller market. Troy-bilt has a big name, however years back they filed bankruptcy and was purchased by MTD products out of Cleveland Ohio, it is not the machine it once was, it is now merely the name. Ariens designed and built the very first roto tiller weighing over 800 lbs, they aren't near that heavy anymore, so dont worry. go to their website, www.ariens.com remember, you get what you pay for.

2007-04-17 09:10:31 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

nicely, the Troy geared up tillers of immediately are not geared up as good because of the fact those geared up some 20 years in the past yet they are regularly extra advantageous than many of the different ones available. MTD has taken over construction an excellent component of the backyard and tiller kit anymore and that they tend to make stuff somewhat at the cheap component. the astounding component approximately Troy Builts is they are regularly kit pushed rather of belt pushed and that they regularly have extra stable gearing than many of the different manufacturers in the transmission. The opposite rotating tines tend to break up the floor extra advantageous extra, even though it incredibly is extra convenient to get your tiller caught and you will tend to have airborne dirt and airborne dirt and dirt construct up below your tiller extra. forward rotating tines can tend to help push or pull your tiller in the path of the floor extra advantageous yet they gained't chop the airborne dirt and airborne dirt and dirt up as finely because of the fact the counter-rotating tines will. I want to apply the forward rotating tines to initially harm up the airborne dirt and airborne dirt and dirt, then come again and use counter-rotating tines on the 2nd time by to bust the airborne dirt and airborne dirt and dirt up right into a powder. in case you have a nil.5 acre backyard, i want to propose getting a good high quality tiller this is pushed via gears rather of a belt. it is going to truthfully be incredibly worth it in the long-term. i've got heard of yet another type this is meant to be extra advantageous than Troy geared up now. the colour of the tiller is blue. yet i will't bear in strategies the call of the tiller type. additionally attempt fending off a tiller that has a Tecumseh engine on it. The Tecumseh engines do no longer artwork ok. Briggs & Stratton engines are ok. Kohler and Honda engines are good. in case you have a descent length backyard tractor that has a PTO, you need to evaluate getting a PTO tiller that suits onto the back of your backyard tractor, then basically making use of a rather small tiller for weeding. A PTO pushed tiller will till ultimately your garde in 0.5 the time or much less and could till ultimately deeper than a time-honored backyard tiller.

2016-10-22 07:25:11 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Depends on your soil conditions. If you have hard packed soil/clay, I would recommend the Troy-bilt. They have rear tine tillers with reversing tines. This keeps the tiller from getting up on top the ground and pulling you all over the garden.

2007-04-16 01:57:28 · answer #4 · answered by sensible_man 7 · 1 0

One of the mid-size Troy-bilt tillers would be good.

2007-04-16 00:53:56 · answer #5 · answered by Thomas S 6 · 1 0

a 5 hp troy bilt works fine for my small garden...

2007-04-16 02:48:06 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have a Mantis and love it. Dependable, hard working, easy to use. Worth the inve$tment! http://mantis.com/ttrack.asp

2007-04-16 01:36:42 · answer #7 · answered by reynwater 7 · 0 1

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