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| An in-line fractures it and leaves it in pancake layers stacked top to bottom in their original order. Somewhat keeping your soil structure intact.
Parabolic rippers shatter it either into powder or bowling balls and completely mix it up. Also completely destroys any soil structure that you have.
Which is better depends on what you want to do.
I’ve never been able to get much of an economic benefit from either other than the residue management part of using a disk ripper for corn on corn ground. Even that is better done with a heavy disk that takes half the time and half the fuel.
Deep tillage usually begets more and deeper tillage.
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