Tips and techniques, General recommendations – Troy-Bilt 12001C User Manual

Page 14

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6. If you need to make any adjustments to the
tilling depth:

a.

Turn the engine OFF. Disconnect the spark

plug wire.

b.

Remove the hairpin cotter and the clevis pin

from the depth stake bracket.

c.

Move the depth stake down for deeper tilling

and cultivating, or up for shallower work.

d. Reinsert the clevis pin through the aligned
holes (in depth stake and depth stake bracket),
and secure it in place with the hairpin cotter.

GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS

Avoid tilling and cultivating in soil that is

too dusty or too wet.

Neither of these soil con­

ditions lend themselves to proper cultivation.

If the tiller/cultivator tends to stay in one spot

and just dig a hole instead of moving forward,
move the handlebars from side to side to start

the machine moving forward again.

When cultivating to get rid of unwanted plants,

it is best to use a shallower setting to prevent
bringing any weed seeds to the surface.

If you need to cultivate between very closely

spaced plants, you can remove the outer tines
as instructed in Section 4. This will give you a
cultivating width of approximately 6 inches.

After you’ve finished cultivating, check the

tines for any tangling. Stop the engine and dis­
connect the spark plug wire before untangling

the tines. Be sure to reinstall the tines in the
same position from which you removed them. If
you reinstall the tines incorrectly, they wii! not
work as well and will make the equipment jump.

To till deeply, hold the tiller/cultivator in one

spot and allow it to dig as deep as you want.

The drag stake can be removed to allow the

tiller/cultivator to dig to maximum depth.

If a rock should get stuck between the tines

and the hood, you can remove the drag stake
and use it to pry the rock loose. You can also

use a block of wood and a hammer to remove

the rock. The tines only turn in one direction

(clockwise as viewed from the right side). Do not

attempt to force them to turn the opposite way.

IMPORTANT:

Running the engine when the

tines are immobilized by a wedged rock or root
can burn out the clutch. Always remove an ob­
struction binding the tines before damage occurs.

IMPORTANT:

Your unit has a centrifugal clutch

which is designed to operate within a specific

RPM range of the engine. If you bog your engine

down (below this range), the clutch will disen­

gage and the tines will stop turning.

TIPS AND TECHNIQUES

Cultivating and Weeding

For effective weed control: prepare the ground

thoroughly, as early as you can, and till it again
several times before you plant. Each time you
do this, you bring buried weed seeds to the sur­
face where they begin to sprout and are killed

next time you till. Then, just before you plant, do
one last shallow tilling to destroy the latest batch
of weed sprouts. From then on, keep all cultiva­
tion shallow, so buried weed seeds stay buried

too deep to germinate.

Your tiller is ideal for this kind of shallow culti­

vating, and the work goes quickly because you
only need to dig an inch or so deep. Some other
tips:

» Set the depth stake with its sloped edge for­
ward (point backward) to minimize tangling on

weeds and to speed up cultivating. Don't set it
too deep: cultivating must be shallow.

• For weeding and cultivating in very tight spots,
/ou can remove the outer tines and work with

ust the inner tines which provide a 6" tilling

width. In these tight situations, you may want to
'emove the depth stake too.

• The machine can be “steered” by tipping it
slightly to either the left or the right.

• To catch weeds growing very close to more
mature garden crops or plants, you can pull the
tiller backward so the tines lift up the plant
leaves. This allows close weeding without dam­
age to the foliage.

• When cultivating around short ornamentals or
flowers, place the machine on the far side of the

plant so the earth is moved toward it, rather than
stripped away from its roots.

Photo 11A

14

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