|
Coldwater, Michigan | Using the relief valve so you don't have to fight with getting sprockets just right. Get them close, get your orfices close, adjust the pressure to dial it in, and you are home free. Without the relief valve you would have to mess with different sprockets, different orfices. You could just use a gate vavle to dial it in, but a relief valve looks nicer.
So yes, a Hypro, or a John Blue diaphram pump works well on a planter, just be sure if you use it for Phosphorous that the inside of the pump has been coated for fertilizer application. Aluminum doesn't like phosphorous very well.
Sorry, Denny, didn't realize that was you Gradient didn't strike me right away!
Edited by Bill Moyer 11/18/2008 11:51
| |
|
- Hypro diaphrapm pump on - Denny from Gradient : 11/18/2008 08:10
- Re: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - PhilJ : 11/18/2008 08:45
- Re: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - PhilJ : 11/18/2008 11:54
- Re: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - JohnW : 11/18/2008 12:32
- Re: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - PhilJ : 11/18/2008 16:10
- RE: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - Les NCKS : 11/18/2008 19:05
- RE: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - Dingaling : 11/18/2008 20:06
- RE: Hypro diaphrapm pump on - Landingstrip : 11/18/2008 20:25
- RE: Thanks,,,,,,,,,,,,, - Dingaling : 11/18/2008 20:30
- RE: Thanks,,,,,,,,,,,,, - Landingstrip : 11/18/2008 20:33
- RE: Thanks,,,,,,,,,,,,, - Dingaling : 11/18/2008 20:38
- RE: Thanks,,,,,,,,,,,,, - Landingstrip : 11/18/2008 20:39
- RE: Thanks,,,,,,,,,,,,, - Dingaling : 11/18/2008 20:58
|