patrickg
Veteran Member
So, I go to the toy store and try to buy a folding boom (three sections, center is stationary) sprayer. The nice sales guy says says you don't want a boom sprayer for pasture YOU WANT A BROADCAST SPRAYER so I buy one. Later a couple locals say you should have bought the boom type as it is less effected by wind (this is Oklahoma where the wind comes weeping down the plain) So I try to install a coupling on the rotary PTO pump and plumb it to the sprayer. I get everything hooked up and put some water inthe 165 gal tank to make a test. It shoots a very narrow pinpoint stream straight back about 30-40 feet. I have TnT and with this I could fight fires with great precision. I call the store and arrange to get a new nozzle. Seems mine was missing a part. You open the back window of the cab and lean out past your waist to reach the lever to turn the spray on or adjust the pressure regulator. So I build a spacer thingy to bolt on where the controls used to go, extended all the lines, and put the controls on top of the spacer (angle iron aout 2 ft long). You don't have to be an acrobat and contortionist now.
Sprays a 30-40 ft swath (+/- wind drift). There, got the background and amusement done...
Got conflicting directions on how to calibrate the unit. Any suggestions? I need to try to figure out how how much material I am delivering. If I go at a fast walk I don't get complete wetting so I'm guessing I'll have to go pretty slowly yet some directions talk about 3 to 4 or even 5 or 6 MPH. Supposedly knowing folks have told me they run maybe 20-30 lbs pressure. Book on mine talks about 50-60. I can easily get 100 if I partially shut the recirc valve.
To a degree I would think you could increase the concentration in the tank to compensate for not drenching the surface of the plants as thoroughly. Of course this would only work within a reasonable envelope. Do the folks who know what they are doing use COTS (Commercial off the Shelf) dyes and foaming agents to see their coverage or do they figure it out and they know how far to stay from the tracks left on the last pass?
I now have somehing less than 30 minutes spraying time (with plain water). My best success so far was to use the included spray wand/pistol to spray clean the tractor and FEL.
Patrick
Sprays a 30-40 ft swath (+/- wind drift). There, got the background and amusement done...
Got conflicting directions on how to calibrate the unit. Any suggestions? I need to try to figure out how how much material I am delivering. If I go at a fast walk I don't get complete wetting so I'm guessing I'll have to go pretty slowly yet some directions talk about 3 to 4 or even 5 or 6 MPH. Supposedly knowing folks have told me they run maybe 20-30 lbs pressure. Book on mine talks about 50-60. I can easily get 100 if I partially shut the recirc valve.
To a degree I would think you could increase the concentration in the tank to compensate for not drenching the surface of the plants as thoroughly. Of course this would only work within a reasonable envelope. Do the folks who know what they are doing use COTS (Commercial off the Shelf) dyes and foaming agents to see their coverage or do they figure it out and they know how far to stay from the tracks left on the last pass?
I now have somehing less than 30 minutes spraying time (with plain water). My best success so far was to use the included spray wand/pistol to spray clean the tractor and FEL.
Patrick