Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10295261 | Soil and Tillage Research | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The greater were the bulk density and water content of the soil the greater was the draft force measured in the three furrow openers, but this effect was more apparent at a working depth of 100Â mm than at 50Â mm. On average FO1 exhibited the lowest draft force followed by FO2 and FO3. In the three furrow openers the vertical force increased with increasing working depth, soil bulk density and soil water content, and its value was greater for FO1 than for FO3 and FO2. Irrespective of the working depth, the furrow cross-sectional area of the three openers increased with soil water content. While such an area was independent of the soil bulk density at a working depth of 50Â mm, it decreased with increasing density at 100Â mm. Whatever the working depth, the average draft and vertical forces measured with FO1 fitted different quadratic functions of the soil bulk density. In FO2 and FO3, however, the relationship between draft force and soil bulk density was linear at working depth of 50Â mm, and quadratic at a depth of 100Â mm. The vertical force acting on these two openers was linearly related to soil bulk density at both working depths.
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Authors
V. Sánchez-Girón, J.J. RamıÌrez, J.J. Litago, J.L. Hernanz,