III. An improved chisel coulter with trash handling and fertiliser placement capabilities
Open Access
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in New Zealand Journal of Experimental Agriculture
- Vol. 7 (2) , 189-196
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03015521.1979.10426188
Abstract
A redeveloped direct drilling chisel coulter is described. The new version has retained the agronomically desirable features displayed by its original experimental counterpart, particularly when operating in dry soil or climatic conditions. In addition the new coulter has much better trash handling ability, separate seed and fertiliser placement, covering and depth control, wear characteristics, and maintenance. The device also operates well in cultivated soil and gives the impression that in these conditions, seed placement is little different from that commonly attributed to precision unit drills, particularly for depth control and the press wheel covering action/and soil-seed contact. Simultaneous band or blanket spraying are now more simple possibilities, as nozzles can be mounted immediately behind the press wheels. Draft requirements have been increased substantially compared with triple disc coulter assemblies and the original experimental chisel coulter assembly, and there is some doubt about the ability of the coulter to deliver seed in very wet soil conditions. However, it appears that the new coulter system provides a significant advance in the development of direct drilling equipment, aimed at increasing the range and reliability of the technique and using more effectively the available soil resources.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- II. Wear characteristics of an experimental chisel coulterNew Zealand Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1979
- I. Trash handling properties of coultersNew Zealand Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1979
- Experiments relating to techniques for direct drilling of seeds into untilled dead turfJournal of Agricultural Engineering Research, 1976