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Field Performance of Weeding Blades of a Manually Operated Push-Pull Weeder

✍ Scribed by V.K. Tewari; R.K. Datta; A.S.R. Murthy


Book ID
102576841
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
362 KB
Volume
55
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-8634

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✦ Synopsis


The field performances of five different configurations of weeding blades of a push-pull weeder were evaluated. A performance index was developed to compare the blades. The field tests were conducted in greengram (Phaseolus aureus) crop infested with grassy weeds such as Echinochloa crusgalli and Cyperus rotundus on lateritic sandy loam soil. The results indicated that the overall performance of a straight flat blade was the best; the field efficiency was highest, physical damage to crops was the least and weed removal per unit area was the greatest. In field weeding with this weeder the largest part of the human energy consumed per cycle of push-pull operation was spent in cutting soil and weed roots and a smaller part was used in penetration of the blade into the soil. The average power requirement in the operation was (21.3 \mathrm{~W}), a work rate which could be sustained by an average farm worker. Weeding with this weeder increased the work output of the worker by approximately four times compared with manual weeding.