Disks For Sale

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    About Disks

    First patented in the U.S. in the later 1800s, disks do the hard work of tilling soil, chopping both weeds and stover to prepare the land for planting a new crop. Their blades can be perfect circles, serrated, or scalloped.

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    Working Width14 ft
    Location: David City, Nebraska
    On-Site Auction
    10' LEVELING DISC 3PT 3147 Used Disks upcoming auctions10' LEVELING DISC 3PT 3147 Used Disks upcoming auctions
     
     
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    Auction Date:6/19/2026 9:00:00 AM (CDT)
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Idabel, Oklahoma
    Seller: Brinkley Auctions Inc.
    Working Width30 ft
    Location: Blue Mound, Kansas
    Working Width33 ft
    Location: Potter, Nebraska
    Seller: S&J Auctions
    ConditionNew
    Location: Cedartown, Georgia
    Working Width8 ft
    Location: Cedartown, Georgia
    Working Width21 ft
    Location: Winchester, Indiana
    Seller: SH Farms
    Working Width40 ft
    Location: Grand Meadow, Minnesota
    Working Width33 ft
    Location: New Iberia, Louisiana
    Seller: Sunshine Quality Solutions LLC
    Working Width31 ft
    Location: Scott City, Missouri
    Seller: 21 Farms
    Working Width35 ft
    Location: Berne, Indiana
    Seller: Sprunger Farms
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Schleswig, Iowa
    Seller: Mitch Struck
    Working Width26 ft
    Location: Blair, Oklahoma
    Seller: Seth Petzold
    Blade Spacing9 in
    Location: Stafford, Kansas
    Seller: Howard Knoche
    Blade Spacing9 in
    Location: Billings, Oklahoma
    Seller: Wilton Imgarten
    Working Width40 ft
    Location: Wright, Kansas
    Seller: Matt Durler
    Working Width29 ft
    Location: Montpelier, Ohio
    Seller: Mark Purk
    Rear HitchYes
    Location: Utica, Illinois
    Seller: Steve Wilson
    Working Width45 ft
    Location: Texhoma, Oklahoma
    Seller: Henderson Farms
    Working Width31 ft
    Location: Jackson, Tennessee
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Lake Andes, South Dakota
    Seller: Derek Laska
    HarrowYes
    Location: Miles, Texas
    Seller: CP Farms Inc.
    Working Width26 ft
    Location: Hawley, Minnesota
    Working Width24 ft
    Location: Othello, Washington
    Working Width35 ft
    Location: Canton, New York
    Seller: Sydenstricker Nobbe Partners
    Working Width30 ft 3 in
    Location: Greenwich, Ohio
    Working Width40 ft
    Location: Greenwich, Ohio
    Working Width31 ft
    Location: Circleville, Ohio
    Seller: Bane-Welker

    About Disks

    Disks (sometimes spelled “discs”) come in a variety of model types. Their descriptions vary by their configurations, such as one-way disk plow, offset disk harrow, and tandem disk harrow. Disks get their name from their numerous concave, disk-shaped blades, commonly made of steel alloys. When pulled behind a tractor, the disks work to till the soil, chopping both weeds and stover (stalks, leaves, etc. left from the previous crop) to prepare the seedbed for planting a new crop. The disks can be perfect circles, serrated, or scalloped.


    Case IH RMX 790 Offset Disk Harrow

    History

    Norwegian immigrant Ole Ringness is credited with inventing the disk plow and disk harrow in Bosque County, Texas. Unfortunately, Ringness died in 1872 before hearing back from the U.S. Patent Office that his application had been approved (albeit with its fee destined to remain unpaid). The first patented disk in the United States had just one set of disks and was pulled by livestock. Eventually, more sets of disks were added, along with self-cleaning capabilities. Kuhn Krause founder Henry Krause came up with the one-way disk plow in 1916, followed in the next decade by fellow Kansan Charles Angell’s version.

    As the additional speed and power of tractors in the 1920s began to cause damage to the disks when they encountered rocks and other obstacles, Roy Ingersoll developed heat-treated steel disks that could withstand the punishment. Ingersoll’s tougher steel also allowed the disks to be formed into the familiar concave shape to dislodge more soil per pass. Kuhn Krause’s Rock-Flex disc harrows also addressed the problem of stony soils in the dawning age of the tractor.

    Modern Features

    In the 21st Century, so-called “compact disks” with independent torsion arms instead of gang shafts spread from Europe to North America as high-speed, one-pass residue management tools.

    Today, new Case IH disks for sale come in widths of up to 47 feet, have rugged disks designed to handle the toughest and heaviest crop residue, and offer more precise depth adjustment to accommodate a variety of soil types and topographies.

    John Deere disks for sale include technologies such as hydraulic folding wings for manageable transport widths; blades in a variety of sizes, weights, and spacing; and advanced bearing designs to keep the bearings free of dirt and debris.

    As for individual disc coulters, Ingersoll Tillage uses a proprietary boron steel alloy with an excellent balance of hardness, resistance to fractures, sharpness, flexibility, and ductility, it says. Case IH, meanwhile, says that its Earth Metal notched blades sharpen themselves during ordinary use.

    Find The Right Disk

    Popular manufacturers of new and used disks available on Tractorhouse.com include Case IH, Industrias America, International, John Deere, Krause, Landoll, LEMKEN, Rome, Sunflower, and others. Some of the most plentiful models on TractorHouse.com are the John Deere 637 and 2623, Case IH 496 and RMX340, and Sunflower 1435 models.


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