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Making Sprayer Applications More Precise

The latest controls and advancements in technology will help growers with a multitude of tasks including hitting the intended target, reducing waste, and much more.

February 7, 2012

  •  Photo courtesy of Becker Underwood
    Photo courtesy of Becker Underwood

In sprayer technology, the latest improvements are not in the sprayers themselves, but instead in controls and technology to improve targeting and precision of spray applications. These provide growers with ways to ensure they hit the intended target with a crop protectant and help reduce waste.

According to Dr. Richard Derksen, Research Agricultural Engineer with the USDA Agricultural Research Service, in addition to precision application tools, some of the latest technology, such as GPS and sprayer controllers, will be useful to help growers with record keeping as well as applying material accurately. He cites as an example recently developed valves that allow growers to more rapidly shut off flow along the boom line of ground sprayers.

“These valves are relatively new, and reduce waste as the nozzles are turned off and then back on,” he says. “The valve relieves the pressure in the line very quickly by opening a path between the spray lines and the liquid return line and it also traps enough fluid in the spray line to help bring the pressure back up quickly when you are ready to start spraying again. So, that dripping that you hate to see when you shut off the nozzles can be further eliminated with this device.”

Nozzles And Applications

Derksen also encourages growers to check label instructions for the types of nozzles to use for specific applications. Many crop protectant manufacturers now provide suggestions on the droplet size or spray quality that they recommend.

For example, he says there may be a recommendation to use a medium-quality droplet size or a coarse droplet size, depending on the product. “All nozzle manufacturers now provide this sort of classification,” explains Derksen. “When they talk about the size of nozzles they have, they also provide information about the spray quality to help growers more easily select nozzles.”

In addition to selecting the best nozzles, growers need to choose the ones that will apply the product with the least amount of spray drift. Specifically, he says that large orifice and air induction nozzles produce a coarser droplet spectrum, and they also help reduce drift.

A Precise Future

Down the line, Derksen says there will be a greater emphasis on precision applications. These new techniques will require growers to use GPS systems and controllers that put the material down in just the quantity that is needed in a particular portion of the field.

Technology farther in the future will enable growers to access weather conditions on the go, allowing them to adjust sprayer operating parameters, he adds. “For example, researchers are working on systems to adjust the sprayer output or the droplet size based on changes in wind conditions. We are adding these controls to traditional sprayers, so the equipment may not look too different.”

Rosemary Gordon is editor of American Vegetable Grower, a Meister Media Worldwide publication.

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