Forum › Forums › Do It Yourself Projects › DIY 3-Point Hitch Sprayer Project
- This topic has 5 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 6 months ago by Little_Grizzly.
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May 13, 2011 at 2:34 pm #30302
I thought I would share a recent project I finished. When looking for a 3-point sprayer to kill a few acres of poison oak, it occured to me that there wasn’t much to them. Essentially a 3 point frame to support the tank, a tank, a pump and a nozzle. Since I already had a bunch of scrap rigid conduit laying around and a 55gal plastic drum that wasn’t being used for anything, I decided to buy a pump and nozzle and put them all together. Here is what the frame looked like before painting it. My welding is generally not pretty but I try always to clean/grind the parts prior to welding and make sure I get good penetration which isn’t hard when your only welding ¼” thick metal.
Amazing what a little rustoleum paint will do. After painting I added a little padding to the saddle where the tank/drum will ride. Just some left over pipe insulation. I mounted the pump next(2.2GMP Northstar from Northern Tool). The hose barb on the pump barely cleared the tubing I welded on to support the tank. I didn't account for that when I was building the frame and I just got lucky that it cleared.
I used a brass 3/8NPT hose barb to tap the Drum and connected that to the input side of the pump. Then I T'ed off the output side of the pump. One side of the T goes to a hand sprayer with about 15' of hose and the other side goes to a broadcast nozzle through a shut-off valve. That way i can broadcast or spot spray with the sprayer. Bought some ratchet straps to attach the tank to the frame. Also as an afterthought thought I might need to vent the tank. So that is what you see on the top. I just tapped a hose barb into the drum then added a bit of hose and another hose barb. Hope I don't get too much sloshing out. Also, I fashioned a long cord for the pump that would plug into an existing plug on my ROPS that I use to power my canopy lights. That way I can use an existing switch on the tractor to turn the pump on.
When building the frame I had to make sure the broadcast nozzle I bought from Northern Tool would be the right height above the ground(36-48″). I decide to have the nozzle 48″ off the ground with the 3 point in the full up position. That way since my 3 point goes from 6″ off the ground in the down position to 28″ off the ground in the up position I can lower the lift to get into the recommended range.
When all is said I put about $100 into the pump and nozzle, $12 for the straps, $10 for the paint, $15 for the wiring,$20 for the hose,$20 for the sprayer wand and about $25 for various hose barb fittings, hose clamps and a shutoff valve and almost forgot the category 1 implement pins I welded into the 3 point frame $10. So, looks like about $210 total. I did have the metal and tank in the form of scrap so didn't pay anything for that. The sprayer I was trying to match from Norhtern Tool was $450 plus tax. So, I saved a few hundred $ and got to spend a couple evenings de-stressing in my workshop. Havn't put it on the tractor yet but I did test it in the shop and it seems to work great.
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May 13, 2011 at 2:50 pm #32315
Nicely executed project, Ray! That should make the weed eradication a lot smoother and easier. Thanks for the step-by-step on it.
Rich
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May 13, 2011 at 4:04 pm #32316
Very Nice
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May 13, 2011 at 4:54 pm #32317
Great job!
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May 13, 2011 at 5:56 pm #32319
Way to cool…
And after spraying it all around the shop, you don't have to worry about getting weeds in there.
Jack
People are hilarious...
I'm supposed to choose and be in one of the 2 parties. And NEITHER is worth a damn! -
May 13, 2011 at 6:01 pm #32320
Well done. See…now it's people doing things like this that make my to-do list so long..
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