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Robert E. Wolf Associate Professor - Extension Specialist Application Technology, Bio & Ag Engineering, Kansas State University Biological and Agricultural.

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Presentation on theme: "Robert E. Wolf Associate Professor - Extension Specialist Application Technology, Bio & Ag Engineering, Kansas State University Biological and Agricultural."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Robert E. Wolf Associate Professor - Extension Specialist Application Technology, Bio & Ag Engineering, Kansas State University Biological and Agricultural Engineering Agricultural Technology Field Day August 9, 2007 Chickasha, OK Sprayer Drift

3 August 5, 2008 Airport & Expo Grounds Great Bend, KS

4 www.bae.ksu.edu/faculty/wolf/ For more information contact: rewolf@ksu.edu

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7 Improving Coverage?

8 Important Droplet Statistics: Operational Area

9 Relative Span RS = (Vd.9 – Vd.1)/VMD Vd.9 = 400, VMD = 300, Vd.1 = 100 Vd.9 = 625, VMD = 300, Vd.1 = 25

10 Calibration!!!! The next phase! Ensuring that the spray droplet spectrum is what it is supposed to be to maximize efficacy while minimizing drift!

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13 Droplet Selection/Calibration:

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15 Droplet Spectra Classification*

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17 Greenleaf Droplet chart:

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19 What is the ‘Real’ difference ? ……Medium droplet at 225 microns ……Coarse droplet at 300 microns How much heavier? Or is it??? 300 = 1.33 225 1.33 bigger 1.33 3 = 1.33 * 1.33 * 1.33 = 2.35 2.35 * 100 = 235% heavier

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21 Nozzle Technology…… Nozzles designed to reduce drift Improved drop size control Emphasis on ‘Spray Quality’

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23 Spray Characteristics are Important to Understand: Demonstrates Turbo Flat vs TurboDrop-5 MPH Wind

24 Nozzles Types?

25 Extended Range Flat-fan: Tapered edge pattern 80 and 110 degree fan Requires overlap - 50 to 60% 15-60 psi range

26 Chamber - Pre-orifice Nozzles: Pre-orifice Exit orifice l Turbulence chamber as in the Turbo Flood l Tapered edge, wide angle flat pattern l Designed to work in flat-fan nozzle holder l Uniform spray distribution, 50-60% overlap l Wide pressure range, 15 – 90 psi l Large, drift resistant droplets l Plastic with superior wear characteristics

27 Air-Induction/Venturi Nozzles Where air is drawn into the nozzle cavity and exits with the fluid.

28 Pre-orifice Air Induction Nozzles: Pre-orifice Air induction Exit orifice Mixing Chamber

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30 Ultra Lo Drift: Double inlet preorifice Large drift resistant droplets Low profile

31 Driftable Droplets: Spraying Systems-2000 Nozzle Type (0.5 GPM Flow) Approximate % of Spray Volume < 200 Microns 15 PSI40 PSI XR 1100514%22% XR 80056%12% DG 11005N/A11% DG 8005N/A7% TT 11005<1%<6% TF-2.5<1% AI 11005N/A<1%

32 Wind Tunnel Drift Results: LSD = 12.7

33 Volume Median Diameter (VMD) 40 psi 40 psi 40 psi 70 psi % less than 210 Microns 37 51 36 35 45 23 30 14 15 2619 22 14 13 2210 17 29 15 Bob Klein, U of Nebraska

34 Desired Effect from Additives

35 Actual Effect from Additives

36 Next Generation Air Induction Nozzles: More compact Larger drops Operates at lower pressures Percentage of fines do not increase with pressure Turbo Injection - TTI

37 Next Generation Air Induction Nozzles: More consistent droplet All-in-one cap and screen Wide angle with 20 degree incline Aim forward or backword Guardian

38 New release in 2006: Dual outlet Superior leaf coverage Droplet range slightly larger that comparable TT flat-fan Turbo TwinJet

39 New release in 2007: XR outlet with venturi air aspirator design More compact than AI style 2-piece with removable pre- orifice AI XR TeeJet

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42 VariTarget: Speed variations from 2-20 MPH Application rates of 5-40 GPA Variable area pre orifice Variable area spray orifice Optimize spray droplet size Maintain efficacy and minimize drift

43 www.spraytarget.com


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