Taylortractornut
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2002
- Messages
- 2,921
- Location
- Iuka Mississippi USA
- Tractor
- 3550 Fard Backhoe and a 1948 Farmall Cub,
Baffles are a must, atleast one anyway. I had an unbafled truck on one job and it broked the bed mounts and almost wrecked the cab. The next day it rolled over in a turn. THey arent too bad full its when it gets about half empty. MY brothers truck is all home built from scavenged parts. The tank was a fuel tanker like a oil company truck. He cut the boxes of it. Then had it mounted on his truck and I gave him an old pto pump off a 1 ton fire truck. Then he plumbed it all with 3 and 4 inch PVC pipe. He has a spray head on each corner and gravity bar on the back.
The spray heads are super simple and effective. He welded a flat cap on top of section of 3 or 4 inch exhaust tubing that was slotted on one partway up. Then he had a horizontal notch in the top under the flat cap. This is held on with muffler Ubolts. He can adjust it with a more open slot for a bigger higher volume heavy spray. Adjust it down to 1/4 inch slot for a longer lighter spray. I cant get a few pics in the next few days of of the heads.
Its a super handy thing to have around the place. Watering roads before grading, fire fighting, garden and tree watering.
The spray heads are super simple and effective. He welded a flat cap on top of section of 3 or 4 inch exhaust tubing that was slotted on one partway up. Then he had a horizontal notch in the top under the flat cap. This is held on with muffler Ubolts. He can adjust it with a more open slot for a bigger higher volume heavy spray. Adjust it down to 1/4 inch slot for a longer lighter spray. I cant get a few pics in the next few days of of the heads.
Its a super handy thing to have around the place. Watering roads before grading, fire fighting, garden and tree watering.