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No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

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No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University
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Page 1: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

No-Till Drill Performance

Randy Taylor

Extension Engineer

Kansas State University

Page 2: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

No-Till Drill Design

• Fluff-and-plant – Coulters

• Slice-and-plant– Single disk – Double disk

Page 3: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Fluff-and-Plant

• Refers to coulter cart type drills

• Coulters cut residue and till the soil ahead of the openers

• Requires additional down force (weight) for coulters

• Potential crusting if the right conditions exist

Page 4: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Coulters Till and Mix Residue

Page 5: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Residue Condition

Page 6: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Slice-and-Plant

• No coulters (single or double disk openers)• Openers slice the soil and residue to place seed in the

slot• Slot may reopen in heavy soils if crop is drilled too wet

and is not followed by a rain

Page 7: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Changing Soil Moisture

Page 8: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Which Configuration is Best?

• What is the situation?– Crop you are planting– Previous crop residue

• What type of soil and soil conditions?– Texture– Moisture

• How you manage seeding depends on which type of drill that you use.

• Long term no-till can be dry on top and very wet at seeding depth.

Page 9: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

2003 Drill Study

• Soybeans were drilled into corn and milo stubble at 5 fields in NE Kansas

• Planted on May 14, 15, 22, and 28• We used 3 drills (Deere 1590, GP 1510P,

Sunflower 9412) on 7.5” spacing, the farmer’s planter (30”), and GP twin row

• Four replications at each field

Page 10: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Drill Calibration

We calibrated each metering cup on the fluted feed drills.

Then we knew which row we were on when we counted stands for emergence percentage.

Page 11: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Plot Layout

Page 12: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Data Collection

Each tractor was equipped with a GPS and means for logging data to determine where the plots were located in the field.

Page 13: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Stand Counts

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

120%

140%

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Days After Planting

Em

erge

nce

Page 14: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Emergence Results

Staggenborg Hofmann Larson Kramer Karl

EP ERI EP ERI EP ERI EP ERI EP ERI

Deere 80a,b 12.4a,b 93 11.7a 96a 13.9a 93a 14.9 79a,b 13.1a,b

GP 7.5 81a,b 11.7b 95 10.9b 90a 13.0b,c 85b,c 14.5 71c 12.8b

GP TR 75b 10.4c 99 11.0a,b 92a 13.7a,b 86b 14.2 79b 13.4a,b

Sunflower 56c 9.9c 95 10.4b 77b 10.8d 80c 14.0 67c 11.7c

SBS 78a,b 13.5a

Planter 82a 13.2a 87 10.2b 93a 12.9c 86b 16.1 72a,c 13.8a

Page 15: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

EP Observations

• Deere either had the greatest EP or was not significantly different than the seeder with the greatest value

• EP for the GP TR was not significantly different than the seeder with the greatest value at 3 of 5 fields

• EP for the planter was not significantly different than the seeder with the greatest value at 3 of 5 field

Page 16: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

ERI Observations

• Deere either had the greatest ERI or was not significantly different than the greatest at all fields

• The GP twin row ERI was not significantly different than the seeder with the greatest ERI at 4 fields

• The planter ERI was not significantly different than the seeder with the greatest ERI at 3 fields

Page 17: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Yield Results

Staggenborg Hofmann Larson Kramer Karl

Deere 21.2 15.5a 20.5 33.0

GP 7.5 21.5 14.7a 21.8 31.8

GP TR 27.5 16.1a 22.0 32.6

Sunflower 23.5 15.4a 21.6 32.8

Planter 21.6 20.7b 21.4 32.5

Page 18: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Other Observations

• We planted into good soil moisture at every field.

• All fields received rainfall within five days of planting.

• Variation in seeding depth could have influenced results.

• Drills were operated by company reps.

Page 19: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

What About Wheat?

• Effectively cutting crop residue

• Consistent depth placement (moisture)

• Seed soil contact

Page 20: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Cutting Residue

• Coulter drills effective cut through crop residue and mix it with soil.

• The ability to cut crop residue increases with disk diameter.

• Increasing down force doesn’t always mean you can cut residue better.

Page 21: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Depth Control

• In general, depth control has been supplied by press wheels.

• Longer swing arms means less consistent control over rolling terrain.

• Single disk openers with gauge wheels near the seed tube offer some of the best depth control.

• Parallel linkage systems also offer more consistent depth control.

Page 22: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Depth Control

• Down force on the opener can dictate depth control in challenging seeding conditions.

• Opener disk angle and operating speed can also affect depth control by creating upward forces on the seeding unit.

• These forces could also impact seed-soil contact if press wheel pressure is reduced or they lose contact with the soil.

Page 23: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Seed-Soil Contact

• We have historically relied on a single press wheel to provide the necessary seed-soil contact.

• Single disk opener systems typically have multiple seed closing wheels

Page 24: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

Summary

• The no-till drills that we have today are much better than their predecessors and are approaching row crop planters.

• Think about what you want to accomplish when considering no-till drills.

Page 25: No-Till Drill Performance Randy Taylor Extension Engineer Kansas State University.

QUESTIONS


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