ABOUT TOM WOLF (NOZZLE_GUY)
Tom Wolf is based in Saskatoon, SK and has 32 years research experience in the spraying business. He obtained his BSA (1987) and M.Sc. (1991) in Plant Science at the University of Manitoba, and his Ph.D. (1996) in Agronomy from the Ohio State University. Tom focuses on practical advice that is research-based to improve the efficiency of producers.
Theodor Leeb started building self-propelled sprayers in Bavaria, Germany in 2001 and formed a partnership with Horsch LLC in 2011 (Horsch has been selling tillage and seeding equipment in North America since 2001 and has 17 dealers in the prairie provinces). The resulting company, Horsch Leeb Application Systems GmbH, is headquartered in Landau a.d. Isar, about 120 km NE of Munich. There they build pull-type and self-propelled sprayers, employ 350 staff, and had sales of approximately $80 M USD in 2019.
This is no Johnny come lately to the sprayer scene.
Their current flagship sprayer in North America is the Horsch Leeb 6.300 VL. I spent a day with Mike Wasylyniuk, Product Marketing Manager for Horsch, in Crossfield, Alberta to look it over.
The Numbers
The sprayer chassis holds a 1700 US gallon stainless steel tank and two 100 gallon clean water tanks for a total liquid capacity of 1900 gallons. A stainless steel Pentair Hypro centrifugal pump provides the flow to the boom, and a second pump is dedicated to the clean water tanks. The sprayer is powered by a familiar FPT 6.7 L producing 310 hp. The boom is 120’ wide in 5 articulated sections with 10’ nozzle spacing fitted with Raven Hawkeye Pulse Width Modulation (PWM). Top spraying speed is 20 mph, top transport is 30 mph. Horsch claims a dry weight of 32,000 lbs when fitted with Goodyear LSW 900 50R46.
A central tubular frame creates room for four-wheel steer that has an interior turning radius of 3 m. Wheels are suspended via hydropneumatics linked to the frame with double wishbones. Track width adjusts from 120″ to 160″, independently, allowing different track widths front and rear without pinning an axle in place. Standing beside the front wheel, one has with easy access to fuel and oil filters, the radiator is on top of the machine facing up with an air-chuck outlet for cleaning.
Plumbing
Any loyal reader of Sprayers101 knows that we believe the biggest room for improvement in spraying is in the plumbing. Horsch Leeb seems aware of this. First, it does away with sight tubes on the tank and relies on a more accurate digital float that reads down to an empty tank. Tank slope position is considered using a gyro mounted at the rear of the sprayer. The tank can be filled with the solution pump or from the tender truck using 3” side or front fill locations. It has auto shutoff when a target amount is reached. As is common, the majority of valves are motor operated to allow automation.
The recirculating boom plumbing is standard North American 1” OD stainless steel to suit any off the shelf nozzle body clamp. It pressurizes from both ends when spraying and returns to tank from the outside of the boom when nozzles shut off or when priming or flushing. The recirculation can run during transport, allowing boom priming en-route to the field, or continuous flushing with a cleaning solution in the main tank on the way home.
The second pump, an Italian Annovi Reverberi 185 BP diaphragm, powers the continuous cleaning function. It draws from the clean water tank and can push this water to the boom for overnight storage when the tank has solution left, or to the tank’s wash-down nozzles for a continuous clean at the end of a job. In continuous clean mode, the solution pump continues to supply the boom while the cleaning water washes the walls and dilutes the remainder. The tank and boom can be washed with a minimum of liquid, and the process is automated using cab or side monitor controls.