DJI T40 Drone spraying and mapping

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  • čas přidán 23. 03. 2024
  • Explaining mapping a field with a current object in the middle with my DJI T40 Agriculture spray drone. Also explain the cleaning my chemical tanks.
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Komentáře • 22

  • @johnryan296
    @johnryan296 Před 23 dny +3

    Man that's cool, I live near the black dirt capital of the country, Pine Island NY. Use to watch the crop dusters all the time.

  • @bigfootsvoyage
    @bigfootsvoyage Před 7 dny +1

    Great Videos! I have a question that i don't really see people covering but i know some if not all drone have 10-18 gallon tanks. What is the average cost of pesticide, herbicide or fungicide per gallon? I've seen people with 500 gallon tanks and i know theirs a mixture of chemicals involved and the specific ratios need. Yet no one talks about that cost side of things. My searching around just kinda says people charge 8-15 Dollar per acre to go out and spray. So could you enlighten me?

  • @eprohoda
    @eprohoda Před 2 měsíci +2

    How u doing?-Hunter,perfect upload. take it easy. ✨

  • @barrettfrancis6192
    @barrettfrancis6192 Před 2 měsíci +1

    We wanna see more Cardwell, the boy is built for the silver screen

  • @jeremymcconnell8060
    @jeremymcconnell8060 Před měsícem +2

    I just found your channel and will be checking the others out. I’m looking to get into the drone spray business and have a few questions. If you could reach out I’d greatly appreciate it.

  • @allanhalladventures
    @allanhalladventures Před 15 dny

    How do your clients find the chemical coverage compared to ground spraying or spraying with an airplane.

    • @HarvestCo
      @HarvestCo  Před 15 dny

      The drone gets a better coverage than the airplane 100% ground rig is super nice and efficient except for running over your crop.. we sprayed 2k acres of fungicide on corn this week and never ran over a single stock lol

  • @FPVNOLA
    @FPVNOLA Před měsícem +1

    Do you need a special license other than commercial drone pilot license?

    • @HarvestCo
      @HarvestCo  Před 15 dny

      Yes, part 107 and a commercial spraying license

  • @shanenelms9740
    @shanenelms9740 Před měsícem +1

    Did u get that drone from Mike either Dron Deer Recovery

  • @rousseauflynn8550
    @rousseauflynn8550 Před měsícem +1

    Hi Hunter! Can you do a video of how you flush the whole system?

  • @jocelynsmith5214
    @jocelynsmith5214 Před měsícem

    Are you in Australia

  • @walkingmanvideo9455
    @walkingmanvideo9455 Před 27 dny +1

    Surely it’s still cheaper to spray with a real helicopter or crop sprayer in much shorter time with greater coverage. No batteries, charging etc.

    • @HarvestCo
      @HarvestCo  Před 15 dny +2

      I believe you're wrong.. the helicopter and duster cannot get where these drones can.. yes the may cover more acreage in a day but its not as efficient the science is there to back it up as well. With my two drones im covering 600 acres a day and my drone doesn't cost over a million dollars! Price per acre is similar but the yields and coverage are better.

    • @walkingmanvideo9455
      @walkingmanvideo9455 Před 14 dny

      @@HarvestCo Interesting. I was chatting with a representative of CASA which is the governing body for aviation in Australia. Even the representative said that when they added up the costs involved in time and pilot registration and training, the drone spraying alternative was just not cost effective in comparison to a helicopter or fixed wing with great capacity and run time.

    • @mookm6639
      @mookm6639 Před 8 dny +2

      For one thing, it’s much faster to mobilize and deploy a drone from a trailer vs getting a helicopter to come out. A drone can get to a field in minutes vs the prep time and scheduling needed for helicopter spray. Timing is everything when spraying and drones got choppers beat in that department. Of course a chopper has higher capacity and more coverage but the precision of a drone can’t be beat. A drone can spot spray with a prescription map saving chemical costs and time. Drones aren’t necessarily meant to compete with choppers either. They’re two different tools. Helicopters are hundreds of thousands of dollars vs a 25k spray drone? Cmon now…

    • @walkingmanvideo9455
      @walkingmanvideo9455 Před 8 dny +1

      @@mookm6639 Valid points. I live in a farming community where we rely on aerial spraying with fixed wing and helicopters. I have tried to push the drone options to farmers but they still remain skeptical. I think the drone idea is valid in certain areas, I am just not convinced when here in Australia there are suppliers saying to spray entire farms and we have hundreds and hundreds of acres per farm here to spray in a certain period of time. Cheers from OZ

    • @kdjorgensen98
      @kdjorgensen98 Před 2 dny

      I would also consider the lower barrier to entry. Much easier to get an FAA 107, and other certs than become a professional helicopter pilot.
      Edit: Just noticed you said you were an Aussie. Certifications may vary in your country to the US!

  • @user-un5ob9cx3k
    @user-un5ob9cx3k Před 11 dny

    如果技术更加进步一点。无人机自动换电池和加水😁😁😁😁哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈