Description
When you’re working heavy residue or tough ground that’s been giving your disc implement a hard time, you need blades that’ll actually cut through instead of just bouncing over the top. This 30-inch Durafaced disc blade delivers the aggressive cutting action Rome and Tatu implements are known for, with a special wear-resistant coating that keeps the edge sharp through hundreds of acres of demanding tillage work.
What You’re Getting
- Notched edge design creates scissor action that slices through tough stalks other blades just bend over
- Durafaced coating extends blade life significantly over standard steel construction
- Quality Boron 15B26 steel at 46-52 Rockwell hardness holds an edge through acres of tough tillage
- Shallow 3.3-inch concavity provides proper soil flow without over-mixing in lighter conditions
- Combo hole design fits the unique 1-1/2 square x 1-5/8 round axle configuration on Rome and Tatu units
Built for Real Farm Work
This blade has 3.3-inch shallow concavity that’s specifically designed for the tillage conditions where Rome and Tatu disc implements excel. Whether you’re working corn stubble in the fall, breaking up compacted ground after harvest, or sizing cover crop residue before planting, this blade handles the variety of soil conditions and crop residue you encounter in real farming operations.
Made to Last
The Durafaced coating is what sets this blade apart from standard disc blades. The heat-treated Boron steel is specifically formulated for disc blade applications, while the special coating adds an extra layer of wear resistance that keeps your cutting edge effective longer. At 46-52 Rockwell hardness, you get the perfect balance—hard enough to hold a sharp edge through rocks and tough conditions, but not so brittle that it chips or cracks under impact.
Good to Know
The combo hole design is engineered specifically for Rome and Tatu axle configurations, so it’ll mount up without modifications. When replacing blades, never mix worn and new on the same gang – the diameter difference creates uneven cutting that leaves mohawk strips. Track your blade wear by measuring diameter annually; most blades are shot when they’ve lost 3-4 inches.


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