Unit 9. Application Equipment, Calibration, and Methods Flashcards
Give two important reasons why you must apply just the right amount of pesticide to the target site.
- Applying less than the label recommendation of pesticide will likely fail to control the target pest.
- Applying more than the label recommendation of pesticide is illegal and may cause damage or injuries.
Why do we calibrate pesticide application equipment?
To ensure that the equipment applies the correct amount of pesticide uniformly to the target site.
What do we call the pesticide application technique that involves applying pesticides uniformly to an entire area or field?
Broadcast application
What do we call the pesticide application technique that involves applying pesticides in strips (usually between crop rows)?
Band application
What do we call the pesticide application technique that involves applying pesticides to specific target pests while avoiding other nontarget organisms in the same area?
Spot application
What do call a type of indoor pesticide application technique that involves placing small amounts of pesticide into tight places, such as along baseboards or in cabinets?
Crack and crevice
A directed application involves precise application to a specific area or site (ex. underleaf, fence line or guardrail spraying), often using specialized equipment.
What are some common specialized application devices that allow you to make directed applications?
- An aerosol can.
- A shield on a spray wand or boom.
- An injector (ex. soil injector).
- A wick or sponge wiper.
Name at least four (4) parts of a sprayer.
- Tank
- Pump
- Agitator (optional)
- Hose(s)
- Screens and filters
- Pressure regulator (optional)
- Boom or wand
- Nozzle(s)
What is the most important consideration when choosing a spray nozzle?
1. The target application rate.
2. The optimal spray droplet size.
3. The spray pattern (ex. fan vs. cone).
4. The intended spray pressure.
5. The chemical characteristics of your spray solution (ex. is it corrosive?).
6. All of the above.
6. All of the above.
Since the nozzle you select affects output, droplet formation and size, droplet distribution and spray pattern, you should consider all of these when choosing a spray nozzle.
In addition, different nozzles are designed for a range of spray pressures, resistance to chemical attack (ex. steel vs stainless steel), etc.
Choose your nozzle based on its design, spray pattern, orifice size, and operating pressure.
Name the four (4) parts of a complete nozzle assembly.
- Nozzle body.
- Cap.
- Screen.
- Nozzle or orifice plate.
What type of spray nozzle is used for broadcast applications with a spray boom?
Flat fan
What kind of nozzle is well-suited to applying insecticides and fungicides to leaf surfaces?
Cone
What type of sprayer would you typically use to spot treat weeds in a bed of ornamental plants?
A hand-held or backpack sprayer, preferably fitted with a spray shield around the spray tip. The shield will help prevent injury to ornamental plants by directing the spray to the target weeds.
What kind of sprayer would you choose to make a broadcast application to a 25-acre field?
A boom sprayer (trailer or 3pt hitch-mounted).
What makes a trailer or 3pt hitch mounted, low-pressure boom sprayer so versatile (useful)?
- With the proper nozzle configuration, it is suitable for both broadcast and band applications.
- Can be used to spray a broad range of insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, etc.
- When properly configured and calibrated, it will evenly distribute pesticides over the target area.
- Can be fitted with a hose and handgun for spot treatments and hard-to-reach areas.
What type of sprayer would be best for covering a large area on steeply sloping ground or along a fencerow?
A boomless sprayer
What kind of sprayer would you need to treat the dense foliage in tall trees?
A high-pressure tree sprayer.
Briefly, what are the pros and cons of a high-pressure, power-driven sprayer?
Pros:
* Spray can penetrate dense foliage, thick animal hair, the tops of tall trees.
* Can deliver large amounts of spray quickly (up to 60 gallons per minute).
Cons:
* Expensive to buy and maintain.
* Use large amounts of gasoline or diesel to power them.
* High pressure increases likelihood of spray drift.
What are the pros and cons of hand-held and backpack sprayers?
Pros:
* Low cost, simple to operate, easy to repair.
* Easy to clean and store.
* Useful in structures, spot treatment and hard-to-reach places.
* Some backpack sprayers have agitation, useful when applying suspensions.
Cons:
* Pressure and output fluctuate unless fitted with a constant-flow valve.
* Low pressure not suited for penetrating dense foliage or reaching much above 10 feet.
* Not suited to broadcast treatments (spot treatments only).
* Those lacking agitation do not handle suspensions well.
Small-engine driven trailer- or skid-mounted sprayers can be fitted with medium-pressure pumps (up to 300 PSI), tanks up to 300 gallons in size, and booms or hand-guns. What are these sprayers used for?
- Spraying fruit (grapes, berries) or small orchards.
- Smaller ornamental trees to 30 feet tall.
- Treating lawns and such where spraying with a boom sprayer or backpack sprayer is not practical.
- Most have hydraulic agitation (poly tanks) or mechanical agitation (steel tanks) making them a good choice for spraying suspensions (ex. Wettable Powders (WP)).