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Re: Fruit Fuel
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The main differences between organic and inorganic water-solubles are (1) no nitrate compounds, and (2) no man-made amino acid chelates. Otherwise the organic-rated ionic compounds in an organic fertilizer come straight from a chemical factory. |
Re: Fruit Fuel
What if I dont feel like mixing, and just spreat 1 - 2 cups of water solubles around the base and wait for the rain to do its thing?
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Re: Fruit Fuel
the only problem with this injector is its for garden hose applications only. if you are looking for something to cut into your sprinkler system, try this. I have one in my back yard and I LOVE it. the guy makes all different sizes to fit your needs
Drip Irrigation Fertilizer Injector 1½ Quart Capacity ½" FPT Inlet Outlet | eBay |
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Re: Fruit Fuel
It is pretty difficult to know how the injector is designed without looking at it and taking it apart. According to the manufacturer, it is proportioning and the 1.5 quart model requires 75 gallons of flow for the fertilizer to be dispersed.
http://fertilizerdispensers.com/serv...portioning.pdf http://fertilizerdispensers.com/serv...hure_table.pdf Even if most of the fertilizer solution did get dispersed in the first 10% of the irrigation, the majority of that would not go to the first outlet unless you only had two outlets. I cannot recommend the product without having more information or personal experience with it. |
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For a number of years the EZ-Flo company received criticism for this kind of design and the behavior I describe above was reported by a number of studies by universities and manufacturers alike. Finally, EZ-Flo modified it's design with a feedback loop to offset the geometric progression. It works a little better now. Still, no one in professional agriculture uses them. The choice for small scale systems is Venturi suction (e.g., devices made by Dramm and Grow More) and for larger scale the choice is water pressure driven pump injectors (e.g., Dosatron and Dosmatic). |
Re: Fruit Fuel
Richard, even if I have 5 gallons of solution in the pipeline to the first outlet, most of that will continue to flow to the following outlets. I understand the principles quite well having used commercial injectors for three orchards of about 8 acres and having successfully completed a course in irrigation engineering.
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There are different scenarios on how such an injector could deliver the fertilizer. If one began injecting into a drip hose (for either drip emitters or micro-sprinklers) that was empty when the water was turned on, much of the first 10% would go to the end of the line as water flowed to fill the drip hose. Such would be the case in my orchards which drain after my 5 HP pump is turned off (I pump about 125 GPM for my orchard). If someone was irrigating a line that was already full and the grower was using outlets that offered little resistance, a higher percentage of the solution would flow out of the first outlet. I am not recommending the product but your explanation that a majority of the solution coming out of the first outlet simply is not accurate. It could actually work okay, releasing the fertilizer fairly evenly in all of the outlets in the right situations, though I certainly don't advocate such a quick injection of the fertilizer. My typical orchard irrigation is about 15 hours long and I inject fertilizer after the system has been running for a couple of hours (spending much of that time checking for coyote damage, etc.) and then inject my fertilizer solution over an hour or two. I use Mazzei verturi-style injectors which are the dominant product used in orchards in California. |
Re: Fruit Fuel
Harvey, there are two basic scenarios: one with the downstream irrigation pipe nearly empty initially (downhill pipe) and the other with the same nearly full of water (an uphill pipe prior to fertigation). Fertilizer delivery is measured by non-interfering collectors (no back pressure) at each emitter. For the non-proportioinal systems: if the downstream pipe is nearly empty then by far the greatest concentration exits the terminal emitter, and for the opposite scenario the majority exits the 1st emitter. This effect is due to the rapid dilution of the tank. I have seen the test in the lab: you are welcome to experiment yourself.
Here in San Diego county there are plenty of landscape contractors that install EZ-Flo and other non-proportional fertigation products. A few years later the homeowner starts having serious problems and myself or one of the consulting firms (e.g., CPS) swaps their tank out for either a Dosatron or Dramm injector which for the same size system is 1/4 to 1/2 the price of the original non-proportional. :lurk: |
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I dont know what model your refering to, but the Dosatron that I found on ebay was $300. Im redoing my backyard and I want a cheap system to shoot into the lines. Hell.....maybe ill go old school and run a Mazzei with a bunch of ball valves manifolded
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Re: Fruit Fuel
Tripple 20 is a generic all purpose fertilizer. The idea behind "Fruit Fuel" is A two-one-three part fertilizer to promote good growth and plant health without forcing a bloom. (Middle number is for bloom) I havnt tried it yet but all the reads sound fantastic. I ordered some and it came today:woohoonaner:
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Re: Fruit Fuel
Ok so I cracked open my order of Fruit Fuel today and mixed op my first batch.. from my experience with other Growmore products, it usually pours out like salt. My order of Fruit Fuel however has the consistency of brown sugar. Is this normal ? Mixed my batch 3 tbps to a 3 1/2 gal bucket
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only problem is I have high & low volume lines. But thats nothing a few jumper lines won't fix |
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