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Tools of the Trade

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Tools of the Trade – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tools of the Trade


1
Tools of the Trade
  • Ground based
  • Manual
  • Mechanical
  • Aerial

2
Ground Based Application Systems
  • Mechanical granule spreaders

3
Mechanical granule spreader skidder mounted
4
Granule spreader on a John Deere 450
5
Ground Based Application Systems
  • Mechanical liquid applicators

6
Two nozzle head mounted on a boom on a dozer
7
Two nozzle head on boom in use
8
Another view of the boom in action
9
Close up of a shorter boom apparatus for
broadcast spray
10
Shorter boom in use to control kudzu
11
Efficacy of kudzu topkill will need to be
repeated for control
12
Multi-nozzle assembly for mounting behind a
tractor or dozer
13
Assembly in operation
14
Similar multi-nozzle assembly in operation
15
Side view showing downward directed spray
minimizes drift
16
4-wheeler adapted as a twin-nozzle spray platform
17
Palmetto-gallberry incursion following clearcut
(Osceola NF)
18
Four wheeler strip spray palmetto- gallberry
Garlon 4 Arsenal
19
Different view of same treatment
20
Tree planter modified to spray seedlings
over-the-top at planting
21
Radiarc nozzle head
22
Radiarc nozzle head in use
23
Mist blower in operation in a seed orchard
24
Ground Application Tools
  • Cut surface tools
  • Injection
  • Hack Squirt

25
Cranco injector bar
26
Cranco injector bar - parts
Nozzle release wire
Nozzle
Hollow tube with a screw top pesticide
reservoir
Flat, sharpened cutting blade
27
Injector bar in use jab tree base, pull wire
inject herbicide
28
Jim-Gem injector bar
29
Jim-Gem injector bar
Handle to release valve
Plunger which opens valve
Tube pesticide reservoir
Sharpened cutting blade
30
Jim-Gem injector in use jab, push handle, jab,
push handle,
31
Cran-jector (Cranko Co. injector bar) from ad
32
Cran-jector (Cranko Co. injector bar) from
mimeographed ad
Tube pesticide reservoir
Wire to release valve
Plunger which opens valve
Sharpened cutting blade
33
Hypo-hatchet and belt mounted herbicide reservoir
34
Hypo-hatchet and belt mounted herbicide reservoir
Pesticide reservoir
Modified hatchet
Connecting hose
35
Hypo-hatchet ready to use
36
Hack-and-squirt apparatus a hatchet and a
squirt bottle
37
Hacking (right hand) and squirt (left hand)
38
Girdled tree notches not deep enough tree
survived
39
Hack-n-squirt tree good deep cuts red dye
marks herbicide excess
40
Squirt part of Hack-n-squirt
41
Ground based manual tools
  • Liquid applications
  • Backpack foliar
  • Soil spot
  • Generally selective but not always

42
Most common manual tool a backpack spray
assembly
43
Tank (1) Diaphragm pump (2) Pump lever (3)
Hose (4)
1
2
4
3
44
Valve assembly (5), Wand or extender tube (6),
Nozzle (7)
6
5
7
45
Veterinary syringe (spot gun) for spot
applications squeeze trigger, metered amount
dispensed
46
Vet gun in operation target selective operation
47
Model 30 Gunjet
48
Model 30 Gunjet
Nozzle
Squeeze trigger
Safety catch
Hose connection
49
Field use of spot guns spray to side, walk
through untreated vegetation
50
Backpack herbicide reservoir spray nozzle at end
of long wand
51
Soil spot treatment (note blue dye) next to a
released seedling
52
Broadcast Pronone site preparation
53
Close up of efficacy of the hexazinone treatment
in the previous slide
54
Avoid using Velpar near a (loblolly pine) RCW
cavity tree
55
Red maple stump sprouting can be a serious problem
56
Use of spotgun to streamline an undesirable
tree note band and drip
57
Oil stain from JLB Oil Plus Improved (vegetable
oil) several days after treatment
58
Streamline is often the best method to treat
multiple stems
59
Effective removal of a multi-stem competitor of a
desirable seedling
60
Kudzu infestation overtopping trees
61
Four wheeler carrying a nurse tank spot gun
with hose to allow mobility beyond the vehicle
62
Effectively a broadcast spray of kudzu despite
using the 4-wheeler unit
63
Clopyralid treatment pine unaffected
64
Foliar treatment to release oak seedlings
65
Mortality to non-target oaks which were
inadvertently sprayed
66
First growing season - cant separate material to
be treated
67
Second growing season ideal time to treat using
foliar spray
68
Fourth growing season - for F.S. this treatment
is too high risk (spray over shoulder height)
69
Blue Worker shirt, face and arms dyed due to
improper application
70
Difficult situation competition too high to
safely treat ex. by streamline
71
Chestnut as nurse crop for white pine no
release necessary, chestnut blight will do the job
72
Foliar application from horseback
73
Moving spray equipment from site to site
74
Aerial Pesticide Application
  • Where is it the appropriate tool?

75
Aerial Pesticide Application
  • Herbicide application from the air is limited for
    use in R8 by the Vegetation Management EISs
    more later
  • Insecticide application from the air is permitted
    in the Region for defoliator control when
    necessary and for some applications made to seed
    orchards

76
Aerial Pesticide Application
  • Cost may be prohibitive if areas are small
  • Often when it is considered applicator safety
    is an issue in alternative treatments
  • Helicopter application only for herbicides in R8
  • Potential problems
  • Treatments are broadcast
  • Evaporation and drift are real environmental
    concerns

77
Aerial Pesticide Application
  • Tools most commonly used to dispense pesticides
    from aerial platforms

78
Why a wing lifts
79
Vortices form at wing tips causing pattern
disruption
80
Aerial application by helicopter boom spray
standard nozzles
81
Often as here to control insect infestations
82
Boom spray rig mounted under a helicopter, with a
nurse tank
83
Standard aerial application nozzle assembly on a
boom
84
Some nozzles are machined to produce swirls of
liquids which then break up into droplets
85
Or, if pointed down, a fairly heavy flooding or
rain of droplets generally used for herbicides
86
The effect is a curtain of droplets falling onto
target vegetation
87
Microfoil nozzle section note the tubes forming
a comb like edge
88
A second configuration of the Microfoil technology
89
Nozzle puts out streams of liquid which
subsequently fragment into large droplets
90
Microfoil nozzles mounted on a boom
91
A third configuration of the Microfoil nozzle
92
Microfoil nozzle mounted on the boom and ready
for use
93
Microfoil nozzles in any configuration generally
produce a curtain of droplets
94
Aerial Pesticide Application
  • Application of granular pesticides from aerial
    platforms

95
A fertilizer spreader can be used to apply
granular pesticides
96
DuPonts turnkey application of Velpar ULW
granules
97
Loading the granule hopper with a premeasured
amount of material
98
Where to look on the next slide
99
Granules being blown out of the dispensing pipe
100
Another Where to look
101
Granule application as seen from the helicopter
102
Site preparation using the Velpar ULW aerial
distribution system
103
Pattern distortion during to fixed wing
application of pesticides
Excessive spray deposited in the area of
influence caused by wing tip vortices
104
Restrict the boom to about 2/3 the wing length to
avoid vortices
105
Distortion of distribution pattern caused by
propeller
Pattern is distorted in the direction of
propeller rotation
106
Redistribute nozzles on boom to compensate for
the distortion
Nozzle placement
107
Effect of nozzle orientation on droplet size
Coarsest droplet
Medium droplets
Finest droplets
Not this (spray collects on boom, etc.)
108
Aerial Application Dont Apply Up and Down
Hills
Too little deposition here
Too much deposition here
109
Aerial Application Apply Along Slopes
110
Powders or granular products which are to be
liquefied are measured by weight prior to
addition to tank
111
Nozzles and Calibration
  • A brief overview of nozzles, their composition
    and performance, and the numbers used to describe
    them

112
There is a wide variety of nozzles for a variety
of purposes
113
Agricultural multi-nozzle booms are the most
common pictures
114
Nozzle catalogs are a good source of information
115
Catalog information
116
Catalog information
117
Catalog information
118
Catalog information
119
Nozzle types Flat and flat fan nozzles
120
Nozzle types Flat fan nozzle
121
Nozzle types Low pressure flat fan nozzle
122
Nozzle types Extended range flat fan
nozzle
123
Nozzle types Hollow cone
124
Nozzle types Hollow cone
125
Nozzle types Solid cone
126
Nozzle types Solid stream
127
Nozzle types Solid stream - disk
128
Nozzle types Also...
  • Twin stream
  • Raindrop
  • Flooding

129
Nozzle types
  • Flat fan and stream nozzles are the most common
    in forestry use

130
TeeJet Nozzle Code
  • Generally a four digit code like
  • 2503 or 4502

131
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • The first two digits
  • (three when gt99O)
  • reflect the angle of coverage at 40 psi
  • 25XX 25O 80XX 80O

132
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • The third and fourth numbers reflect the flow
    rate in tenths of a gallon per minute at 40 psi

133
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • An XX02 nozzle is calibrated to put out 0.2
    gallons per minute at 40 PSI
  • An XX04 0.4 gallons per minute

134
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • Reducing pressure from 40 psi
  • Reduces angle of coverage
  • Reduces volume per minute applied
  • Increases droplet size

135
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • To protect nozzles from unnecessary wear, add a
    filter to remove abrasive contaminants from the
    mixture
  • XX01 XX02 nozzle use a 100 mesh screen
  • XX03 or greater nozzles use a 50 mesh screen

136
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • For thinline and streamline applications
  • a different numbering system comes into play

137
TeeJet Nozzle Codes
  • Disc nozzles (0o angle) are commonly used and
    they are numbered
  • D1 (0.1 gpm)
  • D1.5 (0.15 gpm), and
  • D2 (0.2 gpm)
  • These discs require a 25 mesh screen or its
    equivalent

138
Delavan uses a different Color-bration scheme
139
Screens or strainers
  • In-line screens or strainers are used to reduce
    wear of the orifice of nozzles

140
Screens and strainers
or
or
141
In-line Strainers vs. Screens
142
In-line Strainers vs. Screens
  • In-line strainers may be substituted for screens
    as long as the slots have the equivalent
    straining capacity as the recommended screen mesh

143
Tip material
  • Wear is also affected by the material used to
    make the tip brass, aluminum, plastic, nylon,
    stainless steel and hardened steel are among the
    materials available

144
Nozzles
  • Stainless steel
  • or
  • hardened stainless steel
  • nozzles
  • are
  • recommended

145
Nozzles
  • Nylon, brass, and aluminum nozzles all have
    characteristics which make them less desirable
    primarily a shorter working life due to being
    softer and wearing faster
  • In addition, nylon nozzles shrink and swell

146
Graphic showing comparative output of worn or
damaged tips
147
Graphic showing comparative cost and wear of
different tips
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