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The Rural Voice, 2001-01, Page 12SERVICE CENTRE INC. - 479 NIacEwan Street. Goderich • N7A 4M1 - YOUR LOCAL SUPPLIER ISO 9002 REGISTERED FOR YOUR STEEL REQUIREMENTS Beams. Rounds, Hot & Cold Finished Rounds & Bars, Channel, Reinforcing Steel, Square Tubing, Angles. Flat Bar, Expanded Metal, Bar Grating, Matt's for Concrete Work, Primed Beams & Lintels, Stainless Steel and Aluminum Please Call: TOLL FREE: 1-888-871-7330 PHONE: (519) 524-8484 FAX: (519) 524-2749 A NEW CONCEPT FOR HANDLING BALES • two 5 1/2" augers provide positive gentle lift • eliminates troublesome chains • space saving vertical positioning • reverse for loading out of mow • pow maintenance — durable Delron bearings • all drive and controls conveniently at ground level r SEE USATTNE AUG -A -BALE TORONTO FARM SHOW also Mow systems—installation available VALLA WEBER LANE MFG. BOOTH 4243 (1990) CO. R.R. 4, Listowel, ON NAW 3G9 For Sales & Service call: Feb. 6.9, 2001 Webers Farm Service 5194641185 8 THE RURAL VOICE Scrap Book Inventer creates hovercraft sprayer An inventor and former western Canadian spray -plane flyer has invented a hovercraft sprayer he thinks will be safer and just as efficient as spraying from the air. "I won't ever say the hovercraft can do all the spraying you need to do with an airplane or a high clearance sprayer, but it's safer than an airplane and a lot less money to build and operate than either an airplane or a high clearance sprayer," said Charlie Balmer. Though the hovercraft moves more slowly than an airplane, it has advan- tages. "The spray plane wastes half its time turning, plus more time landing and taking off between loads," Balmer says. "So it travels faster than a hover- craft, but it also wastes time and fuel. "The hovercraft stays in the field all the time, just like a pull -type or self-propelled sprayer. When the tanks are empty, you fly straight to the truck for refilling. We've tested it in fields at 25 miles per hour. At that speed, depending on the boom size, you can spray 120 to 150 acres an hour." In tests conducted this summer near the Valmar factory at Elie, Manitoba, Balmer flew his hovercraft in winter wheat fields that were heading out. There was no crop damage. He's con- fident it can go into more mature fields without damage and will test it in 2001 on 400 acres he plans to rent for experimental purposes. "What we did see for sure (from this summer's tests) was that the crop just pushes in under the skirt at 25 miles per hour and then pops out at the back again as if we hadn't been there," Balmer said. "There's no sign of damage. Right now, 1 think it will be good for post -emergent spraying up to about knee high." The prototype uses a 225 -hp Cummins engine but Balmer's calculations show it could run on 120 hp. The machine has wheels which are used to drive and steer the sprayer but these barely touch the ground when the two large fans are operating, causing no soil compaction. The wheels at the front, taken from an ATV, keep the hovercraft from digging into a ditch or mound of soil. Two 200 -gallon (U.S.) tanks used in demonstrations last summer will be replaced with two 600 -gallon tanks this year. So far Balmer, who logged 19 years flying spray planes in western Canada, has -driven the hovercraft up and down 13 per cent slopes and across field drainage ditches with no problems. That doesn't mean there aren't problems, however. "It puts a lot of dust in the air on a dry field," he says. "It's terrible on a bare, dry surface with no crop cover."0 — Source: Western Producers Farming magazine Some hog barns use more water than needed A western Canadian study showed that some hog barns use more washwater than needed to clean their barns. The study by the Veterinary Infectious Diseases Organization Technical Group found wash -water variations from 25 litres per pig to 250 litres. "It's affecting the size of manure storages," said Gary Plohman of Elite Swine Inc., one the study's participants. "The cost to apply manure can be a penny a gallon. If it's an all -in, all-out facility, you're turning that 2.8 times per year. That's a lot of washing." Washing after each group of pigs is shipped uses more water than any other process in the cycle, the study showed. There were wide variations in the use of water for washing, said Lee Whittington of the Prairies Swine Centre. In some barns the pens were initially wetted with water from sprinklers to soften the manure. The cleaners came back with power nozzles to blast the manure down the drain. Other barns used power nozzles from the start, using force to wash away rather than trying to save water. In two operations, barns were flooded to above the floor slats, then the whole thing was washed out. — Source: Western Producer