Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer

   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #1  

HCJtractor

Veteran Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2009
Messages
1,519
Location
upstate South Carolina, Greenville
Tractor
Kubota M6800, Massey Ferguson 240
Just bought a no-til grain drill and also restored a no til 3 row planter. I've never planted No-Til so I read that herbicide is a necessity to really benefit from No-Til. I will be planting food plots scattered over two properties and will also spray the woods roads to keep them walkable and to minimize bush-hogging.

I have a Fimco boom sprayer for my 4 wheeler and it works ok but I really need more capacity. I am thinking about 100 or 150 gallons. I also am thinking about buiding one. They seem pretty simple. I am debating about a 3 point model vs. a skid model that will fit in my truck. The truck model appeals to me as water is unavailable at my property (except from a rain cistern that would need some particulate filtration) so I could fill up at home and drive to the property. Yet I guess it would be limited to a 12 V pump or gas pump, and controllling the spray seems more difficult.

So a tractor model I guess is more practical, would give better visibility, could use a PTO pump, and would be more manueverable. I am just brainstorming so any ideas and comments would be great.

I am not opposed to buying one but they appear to be well over a grand. So please give me any feedback on a 3 pt. model vs a truck bed model (I do not have a UTV so thats out) I guess a trailer type would work but it would have to be a road worthy trailer so I could pull it on the highway.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #2  
how much acreage you plan on planting? Usually with spraying you use about 15-20 gallons per acre when applying round-up. So I am assuming you are doing some serious planting and not just a few acres of food plots. If your looking for something about the 150 gallon size try looking on craigslist for a 200 gallon tow behind. That way you can still apply it with your tractor, refill it at your house and tow it your site with your truck.

I've seen them regularly on craigslist and most were priced under 500 dollars.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer
  • Thread Starter
#3  
how much acreage you plan on planting? Usually with spraying you use about 15-20 gallons per acre when applying round-up. So I am assuming you are doing some serious planting and not just a few acres of food plots. If your looking for something about the 150 gallon size try looking on craigslist for a 200 gallon tow behind. That way you can still apply it with your tractor, refill it at your house and tow it your site with your truck.

I've seen them regularly on craigslist and most were priced under 500 dollars.

I have two different properties that I plant. Each one has about 6 to 10 acres of plots, but spread around the acreage. In addition, I would like to spray some of the roads that grow up so badly, so this adds maybe a mile or two of woods roads that can be done in one pass (say 15" wide) So you can see, at 15 gallons per acre, my little 25 gallon ATV sprayer runs out pretty fast. I can have some one following me with a larger tank in a truck, but it would be nice to be able to spray w/o someone else having to be there.

Your idea of a trailer sprayer would be ideal, but new ones look to be in the $3000 range, and I have yet to see used ones. I will keep looking.

Is that 15 to 20 gallons/acre using a Roundup type product pretty standard?
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #4  
yeah usually 1-2 quart glyphosate to about 15 gal per acre for a boom and 20 gal for a boomless is pretty much the standard. 2 quart of gly is a really hot mix usually you can get away with 1 to 1.5 quart. It sounds like an old ag sprayer would fit you perfectly.

Try using searchtempest.com and do a search for a sprayer. It will do a total search on craigslist within like a 200 mile radius of your zip code and will check all postings within the last six weeks. If you live in a agricultural area odds are you might find one or you could look on tractorhouse.com and see what the dealers might have new or used.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #5  
Here's why I built mine. We own some pasture ground, about 3 miles away as the crow flies, and wanted to develop a market garden on part of it a couple of years back. I had already worked up a good size deer plot in the back of it, that bordered a sanctuary area of THICK brush and blackberry briars, and didn't spray anything to burn down before I plowed. Talk about a workout on the 8N and a 2-14 Ferguson! Hey, seat time is seat time, right? Got to looking for a decent priced boom sprayer, never found one. Searched this site and found this thread, http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/build-yourself/82223-building-boom-sprayer-w-foam.html . There are some excellent ideas to be gleaned from it. I decided on a 3 point unit with a roller pump for the versatility and easy hook-up. Although my sprayer tank is pretty small by most standards, 30 gallons, it works for my application. Water is 8+ lbs/gal, the 300 lbs or so the whole sprayer full of solution weighs is not too much for my tractor to work with. It's been plenty of product, too. I had 2 garden plots 140 x 140 to work up, had enough to do both and spray the fence line, too. Plowing was oodles easier. If you're wanting the sprayer for no tilling, I wouldn't think you'd want to have to apply herbicide on your plots out of your truck, or a trailer. Boom sprayers are fairly simple to fabricate. I like the added satisfaction of the build. I'm upgrading mine with 12V solenoid valves for ease of operation from the "cab" of the 8N, better spray wand, and a slightly larger (35 gal) tank. HTH Mark
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #6  
Oh, here's my solution to no water at the market garden problem. Pump it on and off with the same roller pump used to power the boom sprayer. :D Another reason for the 3 point sprayer. Mark
 

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   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Nice looking garden! Thanks for the info. I even thought about planting a pumpkin patch for the neighborhood kids to visit next fall. I will check out the thread you mentioned.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I am considering making a 3 point hitch sprayer. I have a Leinbach "carry all" frame that I never use that would be a good platform to start with. I also have a 100 gallon tank from Tractor Supply, so it seems all I would need would be a good roller pump and plumbing. I think I may make this boomless and use a good boomless nozzle. How difficult would this be?

Dumb question but with a 3 point sprayer and roller pump, do you control the flow (on and off) by simply turning on/off the PTO? Or is there some other
12V control?

The simplicity of just driving around with the tractor spraying appeals to me vs. having to hook up and manuever a trailer, and a trailer adds more cost and storage issues. And I could overcome lack of water on site by filling a 3 point tank at home and lifting it off my truck with the FEL. One hundred gallons would go a long way and have enough coverage to do all I need.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #9  
HJC sounds like you pretty much have just about everything you need for a sprayer. To control flow usually you can get away with running some type of gated valve between the pump and the nozzles just be sure to locate it so you can adjust it from the tractor seat. Good luck on your fabrication and take pics. I priced out trying to build one myself by buying parts etc and did the cost analysis and a 60 gal 3pt fimco from Agrisupply was cheaper but since you already have 2 of the most expensive parts of a sprayer already it is definitely more cost effective to fabricate.
 
   / Help me decide on a herbicide sprayer #10  
You can use the pto on off on the pump or a better way is to plump it with either a 12v electric valve or manual valve mounted on the fender so that when you turn off spray the tank goes into agitate. Basically plumbed so that the out on the bottom of your tank goes to the pump, from the pump to a strainer filter if you want, you can skip it just might be problems if using smaller tips getting clogged with dirt / sand in the tank, clean water in not a problem. Next the line needs to tee, one leg goes right back into the top of the tank and agitates or helps mix and keep your solution mixed, other leg goes to a pressure regulating valve and gauge, next to either a manual or electric shut off valve, out from there to your booms.
A little more complicated, but you can calibrate your rig this way to put out a certain gallons per acre and use the right amount of chemical and be most efficent in using your chemical. You can calibrate to lets say 10 gallons of solution per acre and your 100gal tank can do 10 acre batches.
 
 

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