Forum › Forums › Do It Yourself Projects › Less expensive Culti-Packer design
- This topic has 6 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 2 months ago by Bob Rooks.
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August 31, 2011 at 7:47 am #30393
I thought I would put this project on for all the food plotters out there who don’t use a culti-packer because of the $900 price tag on alot of them. I saw a similar design on some of the other hunting forums I read and thought I would put my own spin on the design.
I started with a single wall 15” poly culvert 10 ft long and cut it in half to make a 5’ packer. Decided I would use a piece of rigid conduit for the axle down the middle of the culvert. I cut two plywood end-caps that fit into the end of the culvert and cut a hole for the axle to pass through in the center of each. I secured one of the end-caps into the culvert with decking screws through the culvert into the edge of the end-caps. Next I stood the culvert on its end on flat ground and put the axle through the end-cap and poured 9-80lb bags of quickrete into the culvert then attached the other end-cap and let the concrete cure for 4 days.
I built the frame from some scrap conduit and tubing I had laying around so it was cheap. Used a couple of pillow block bearings where the culti-packer axle attaches to the frame. Spent about $175 total, the culvert was the most expensive part had to buy a 10ft section for $80 to get a 5’ piece out of it. The pillow block bearings were about $20 each plus bolts and concrete.
Some things I learned:
– I could have used a smaller culvert. The one I built weighs about 1000 lbs by my estimate, with a 12” culvert could have been 700 lbs (less concrete and work) and probably would have done as good a job.
– Could have avoided the pillow block bearings. I saw another design where the frame was all made out of pre-threaded pipe and fittings from Lowes. This doesn’t require welding and instead of bearings that design had T-fittings that the axle passed through
Now I need to figure out how to make a bulk lime spreader on the cheap.
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August 31, 2011 at 8:28 am #33109
Well, that's using your imagination…good job Ray!
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August 31, 2011 at 8:53 am #33110
Brilliant. Well done. That's a heavy beast.
Now for the ignorant question… what is a cultipacker used for?
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August 31, 2011 at 11:20 am #33111
It presses the seed into he ground for good ground contact.Additionally it make grooves for the water to soak into.I have found that when broadcasting seed the seed germinates in the bottom of the grooves just like you planted it in rows.Must have equipment for the food plotter.
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August 31, 2011 at 11:31 am #33112
I'm not an expert farmer but, for small seeds like clover, chickory and alfalfa etc it is imortant that they make good contact with the soil and not be buried too deep. I planted about 1.5 acres of clover last spring that didn't germinate because I used a heavy fence drag to cover it. Now I disc, fence drag(to smooth), broadcast my seeds and then cultipack. Hopefully this will work better.
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September 1, 2011 at 8:53 am #33120
I learn something new everyday. Not always something good but new at least. Today is a good day. Thanks for the education.
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September 1, 2011 at 11:04 am #33123
Excellent job Ray, well done! Nice pics too!
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