Home News Livestock Crops Markets Hay, Range & Pasture Home & Family Classifieds Resources This Week's Journal

High Plains Journal on Nook
Farm Survey

Reader Comment:
by Madoda Greenstock Nyovane

"How can we access funds for South African co-operatives for livestock and agricultural proccessing for"....Read the story...
Join other discussions.


Gauging farmers' water and pesticide use

Heping Zhu and Adam Clark at the Agricultural Research Service Application Technology Research Unit, Wooster, Ohio, have developed an easy-to-use and easy-to-build portable instrument so that farmers and greenhouse growers can test the accuracy of their pressure gauges.

Farmers rely on the accuracy of pressure gauges to ensure that desired rates of pesticide sprays or irrigation water are applied. But the pressure gauges on pesticide spraying equipment or irrigation lines often fail after a few years.

So Zhu, an agricultural engineer, and Clark, an engineering technician, developed a tester that can be assembled by any do-it-yourselfer. The main body of the tester is commercially available. Farmers go to the field with this hand-held tester, remove a pressure gauge from their equipment and screw it into a threaded port on the left hand side of the instrument. On the right hand side there is an accurate factory-calibrated gauge. In the middle is a small canister of water attached to a pistol-grip handle.

Squeezing the handle generates pressures to the two gauges for comparison. If the farmers' gauges don't match the factory-calibrated gauge, farmers have two choices. If the gauges aren't off by much farmers can keep using their gauges, but mark the actual location where the dials should be for their desired readings. But if the gauges are too far off or farmers want to use a number of different pressure settings, they would buy new gauges.

Extension personnel are already using a tester based on Zhu and Clark's design. They find the tester a very useful and inexpensive tool for checking the accuracy of farmers' pressure gauges. This saves farmers money, saves precious water and helps keep unneeded pesticides out of the environment.

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.

1/28/08
None\10-A

Date: 1/18/08


Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source
Google
 
Web hpj.com
Copyright/Privacy
Copyright 1995-2012.  High Plains Publishers, Inc.  All rights reserved.  Any republishing of these pages, including electronic reproduction of the editorial archives or classified advertising, is strictly prohibited. If you have questions or comments you can reach us at
High Plains Journal 1500 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., P.O. Box 760, Dodge City, KS 67801 or call 1-800-452-7171. Email: webmaster@hpj.com

Search HPJ








Inside Futures

Editorial Archives

Browse Archives