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| The double-down setup is a really good way for what you are looking to do for sure.
The MR110-10 is a pretty darn coarse nozzle, so I could see why you were looking to improve coverage.
If you give me a better idea of what rate and speed you are trying to go, with a double-down setup, you can make nozzle combo sizes that don't exist otherwise (e.g. if you are a bit short on the spray speed with a 110-10, you could make a 110-06+110-05 combo to make a 110-11 size). Just make sure in the monitor you are selecting the nozzle size for the TOTAL nozzle size (e.g. 110-06 + 110-04 = '-10 size'). There are some non-standard nozzle sized in the monitor as well. Sometimes you'd just have to scroll up to the top of that list or to the bottom (differs on some brands/monitors).
All in all, I attached two nozzle charts (based on 20GPA at 12mph for an example), using the MR110-10 compared to the SR110-06 + MR110-04.
Again, if you were wanting to minimize drift further, you could swap the nozzles in the combo to tip-toe towards a coarser spray while still maintaining much higher level of coverage than you currently get.
Also, if you were wanting to make sure the nozzles are being on the label for Extend's label (not sure if you were spraying straight liberty on your Extend beans), then just make sure both combos smaller sizes are on the list. Chances are this would mean both of them are MR series in the smaller sizes. Still lots of low hanging fruit that you can gain in coverage by splitting up a really large single nozzle into two smaller more effective nozzles.
(MR110-04+SR110-06 combo_20GPA_12mph (full).png)
(MR110-10_20GPA (full).png)
Attachments ----------------
MR110-04+SR110-06 combo_20GPA_12mph (full).png (131KB - 1 downloads)
MR110-10_20GPA (full).png (65KB - 1 downloads)
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