Soil conditioner, power rake, Harley rake — three names for essentially the same thing. It's the attachment that turns rough graded dirt into a fine seedbed or sod-ready finish grade in one pass. But it only does that well under specific conditions. Wet clay in May? Wrong tool. Tilled garden plot with clumps and debris? Perfect.
The core mechanism is a spinning drum covered in tined rotor blades — typically AR400 or similar hardened steel — that rotate at high speed, facing forward into the material. As the skid steer moves forward, the rotor churns the top 2–6 inches of soil, breaks up clods, pulverizes debris, and sizes the material. Smaller debris gets thrown rearward and buried; larger rocks, roots, and chunks get pushed to the front of the machine where they collect.
That last part is important. The soil conditioner doesn't remove debris — it sizes and sorts it. Smaller material falls through; larger material accumulates at the machine face. You're responsible for cleaning that windrow. On a rocky Prairie lot with plenty of surface stone, you'll be stopping regularly to push the rock pile. On a freshly stripped building lot in the lower Fraser Valley where the concern is clods and surface irregularity rather than rock, the job is much cleaner.
The soil conditioner earns its keep in a narrow but heavily-used set of tasks:
It is not a deep tiller. If you need to turn and aerate 12 inches of garden bed or break virgin prairie sod, you want a rotary tiller attachment instead. The soil conditioner works in the top 4–6 inches. That's its zone.
This comparison trips up a lot of buyers.
| Attachment | Working Depth | Rock Handling | Best For | Rough Grade Needed First? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soil Conditioner / Power Rake | 2–6 in | Surfaces and windrows, doesn't remove | Final seedbed prep, turf renovation | Yes — works after rough grade |
| Rotary Tiller | 6–12 in | Damages if too rocky | Deep soil aeration, garden beds, breaking sod | Not necessarily |
| Landscape Rake | 1–3 in (passive) | Collects and separates surface rock | Rock removal, surface levelling | Yes — finish-grade tool |
The landscape rake is passive — it drags through the surface and sorts by size. Good for rock collection. The soil conditioner is powered — the rotor actively chops and processes material. Better for breaking clods and achieving a consistent fine finish. The tiller goes deeper and is more aggressive, but at the expense of surface quality and rock tolerance.
On forum discussions across r/Skidsteer and various lawn contractor forums, the consensus is: soil conditioner is the most versatile finishing tool for anyone doing residential landscaping and lawn work. If you can only pick one finishing attachment, it usually wins over the landscape rake because it does everything the rake does plus the active pulverizing.
The soil conditioner is a good attachment. It is not a miracle worker. Three conditions will make you want to throw it off a cliff:
Wet clay doesn't break up under the rotor — it smears. The blades pick up and deposit clumps instead of pulverizing them. You'll end up with a surface that looks worse than when you started, with clay balls embedded throughout. Wait for clay to dry to moist-not-wet. In BC's Lower Mainland or Ontario's clay-belt, this means timing the job carefully and possibly waiting several days after rain.
The soil conditioner works on a fairly consistent surface. If there are large undulations — 6+ inches of variation across the work area — the rotor loses ground contact in the high spots and buries in the low spots. You need rough grade done first with a bucket or box blade. The soil conditioner is a finishing tool, not a grading tool.
Large rocks (anything over 3–4 inches) will damage rotor blades over time. The blades are replaceable — that's by design — but if you're working a lot that's genuinely rocky, you'll burn through blades. On Rocky Mountain acreages and Shield-country Ontario lots, assess rock content before committing to a soil conditioner. A landscape rake may be more economical if the primary job is rock removal rather than finishing.
Soil conditioners are standard-flow attachments. Most require 15–25 GPM at 1,500–2,500 PSI — solidly in the range of any mid-size skid steer's aux circuit. You won't need high flow for this attachment.
Width selection follows the same logic as most landscape attachments: match the attachment width to your machine's wheelbase. A 72-inch soil conditioner on a 60-inch track machine means the rotor sticks out 6 inches per side — manageable, and the wider coverage per pass is usually worth it. Going to 84 inches starts creating visibility and edge-condition complications. Most users land on 72 inches as the sweet spot for a standard skid steer.
| Width | Best Machine Size | Flow Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 48 in (1,220 mm) | Small skid steer / mini track loader | 13–20 GPM | Good for residential lots, tight access |
| 60 in (1,524 mm) | Small to mid skid steer | 14–22 GPM | Common on Bobcat S450/S510 class |
| 72 in (1,829 mm) | Mid-size — most common match | 15–25 GPM | Most popular size; best pass-width efficiency |
| 84 in (2,134 mm) | Large skid steer or compact track loader | 16–26 GPM | High-production commercial landscaping |
Bidirectional rotor control matters. Better models let you reverse the rotor direction — which changes the throw pattern and lets you feather material differently depending on the job. Cheaper units are single-direction only. For landscaping contractors doing varied work, bidirectional is worth the premium.
A few Canadian-specific notes worth knowing:
Prairie gumbo and hardpan. Saskatchewan and Alberta have soils that dry into concrete-like hardpan after dry spells. A soil conditioner will not break this up — you need a tiller or auger attachment first to fracture it, then finish with the conditioner after water is worked in. The conditioner is a surface finisher, not a breaker.
Shield country rock. Ontario's Canadian Shield terrain (Muskoka, near-north) and interior BC have significant surface and near-surface rock in many areas. Before investing in a soil conditioner, be realistic about rock content. If you're doing acreage work north of Huntsville, a landscape rake may get more use than a soil conditioner.
Spring conditions in general. Across the country, spring is when this attachment sees the most demand — lawn renovation season, post-winter leveling, new construction start-up. But spring also means wet and partially thawed soil in many regions. Don't try to use a soil conditioner on ground that's still frozen at depth even if the surface looks workable.
New soil conditioners from recognized brands (Bobcat, Virnig, Bradco, Land Pride) run $4,500–$8,000 CAD in the 72-inch size. Budget imports (grey-market Chinese units) are available for $2,000–$3,500 CAD. The cheap ones work until the gearbox or motor seals fail — which happens faster than the marketing suggests when running through debris-heavy sites. They also tend to have inferior blade hardness, meaning faster wear.
Rental is widely available from Sunbelt, Home Depot Equipment Rental, and independent equipment rental yards across Canada. Day rates typically run $175–$350 CAD for a 72-inch unit. If you're doing a single lawn renovation or one-time construction cleanup, renting makes obvious sense. Contractors doing landscaping work on a rotation of residential properties will hit the break-even on purchase pretty quickly.
Soil conditioners are available used fairly regularly in Canada. They're popular attachments on landscaping-heavy dealers' used equipment lots, and they show up on Ritchie Bros., Purple Wave, and IronPlanet. The inspection is straightforward: check blade wear (measure remaining blade thickness against the spec sheet), check gear oil level and colour in the gearbox (brown-black means contaminated; replace before use), check hydraulic motor for external leaks, and verify all blade fasteners are present and tight. Blades should be replaced as a set if significantly worn — running a rotor with uneven blade height causes vibration that accelerates bearing wear.
A used Harley brand, Bobcat, or Cat (rebadged Harley) unit in serviceable condition with fresh blades is often the best-value purchase in this category.
Looking for specific models available in Canada? Browse the skid steer power rake catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers.