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Applied Engineering
13
Tips to Improve Sprayer Performance
Erdal Ozkan
Paying attention to
certain things will help you improve the accuracy and performance of
your sprayer save you money. Applying chemicals with a sprayer
that is not calibrated and operated accurately could cause insufficient
weed, insect or disease control which lead to reduced yields. The
following tips will help you improve the performance of your sprayer and
keep it from failing you:
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Check
the gallon per acre application rate of the sprayer. This can only
be determined by a thorough calibration of the sprayer.
-
Check
your spray nozzles' output periodically for clogging. How the
chemical is deposited is as important as the amount applied. Know
what kind of nozzles are on your sprayer and whether or not their
patterns need to be overlapped for complete coverage.
-
Setting
the proper boom height for a given nozzle spacing is extremely
important in achieving proper overlapping. Conventional flat-fan
nozzles require 50% overlapping.
-
Misaligned
nozzles, nozzle tips with different fan angles on the boom, clogged
nozzles and uneven boom height are the most common causes of
no-uniform spray patterns. They can all cause streaks of untreated
areas that result in insufficient pest control and economic loss.
-
Use
water in your sprayer that looks clean enough to drink. You don't
have time to clean plugged nozzles.
-
Never
use a pin, knife or any other metal object to unclog nozzles. They
will change the spray pattern or flow rate of the nozzle.
-
Know
your actual travel speed, and keep it steady as possible. Doubling
the speed may let you cover the field twice as fast, but it also
cuts the application rate in half.
-
Pay
attention to spray pressure. Variations in pressure will cause
changes in application rate, droplet size and spray pattern. At very
low pressures, the spray angle will be noticeably narrowed.
-
Don't
waste your chemical. After all, you have paid for it. Spray drift
wastes more chemicals than anything else. Don't spray when the wind
speed is likely to cause drift. Don't take the risk of getting sued
by your neighbors because of the drift damage on their fields. Keep
the spray pressure low if it is practical to do so, or replace
conventional nozzles with low-drift nozzles. Use other drift
reduction strategies: keep the boom close to the target, use drift
retardant adjuvants, and spray in early morning and late afternoon
when drift potential is less.
-
Calibrate
your sprayer periodically during spraying season to keep it at peak
performance. Use clean water while calibrating to reduce the risk of
contact with chemicals.
-
Carry
extra nozzles, washers, other spare parts, and tools to repair
simple problems quickly in the field.
-
Clean
your sprayer as often as possible and do a thorough clean-up at the
end of the spray season.
-
Be
safe. Pesticides are poisons. Read the chemical and equipment
instructions and follow them. Wear protective clothing, rubber
gloves and respirators when calibrating the sprayer, doing the
actual spraying and cleaning the equipment.



Erdal Ozkan, Professor and Extension Agricultural Engineer,
can be reached at 614-292-3006 or ozkan.2@osu.edu.
This
column is provided by the OSU Department of Food, Agricultural, and
Biological Engineering.
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