If you are getting a wheel disc make sure it isnt any bigger than 8ft and that will be a big load. You can sometimes take off a blade on each side to narrow a wider one down
 
I would say it depends on the soil,hills and how steep the angle of the blades is. In central south Minnesota, I pull an old IHC adjustable 8 footer, no wheels, with my Supers, and thats about all it will handle in my soils and blades set fully angled. Somewhat hilly here too. I have cement blocks on also for weight. If the blades are only set slightly angled it pulls it with ease.
 
I have a 10' for my H. On sandy soil it can't be run all the way down all the time. When a lot of dirt starts going over the axle, the H does not like it.

Greg
 
Pulling a 10ft with an H will work if you arent going in the ground very deep as 7ft tandem in plowed ground even cornstalks was a good load. It takes a good M to pull 10ft if you are cutting very deep.
 
We used to pull a 15' single disk with the Super H and that was a load, especially with some weight on it. So, I suppose an 8' tandem would be a load for an H. Roger
 
The general standard for a two plow tractor when I was growing up in North Central Ohio was a 7 foot tandem pull type disc. On hard ground as in discing corn stalks you could pull more, but it would be plenty on plowed ground. Moist could not afford two discs, so 7 ft. was it.
 
If you stay at 8' or under, you should be pretty safe in most conditions. Worst case you can remove the outer disks and reduce the width to 7' like someone suggested earlier.
 

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