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Southern Missouri | My opinion the drones have their place , wet seasons soft dirt being players in corn / bean fungicide and getting popular, however , if you have a qualified drone applicator that knows his stuff and has filled out all qualifications including having proper insurance in place ( a drift incident happened in our area by a drone applicator that had a spray drift policy but no 137 , actually none of the proper licenses and when the person he drifted on met with his adjuster and had it explained to him how the drift incident happened they at first denied the claim , I think insurance wound up paying for the drift but dropped the aerial applicators policy ) and he can service you , I’d skip the hassle of buying outdated equipment because it all is very shortly in the drone world and proper equipment to keep it on track is pretty consuming as well , battery charging and proper chemical supply that stays in formulation ( a way to keep it in suspension) takes a good plan , just my two cents for your question | |
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