Uri M. PEIPER
Israel
I would to add a comment on the gantry issue.
There are a few people in this room who have
worked on the gantry systems, and the main
question is: why didn’t this machine actually
take off on a commercial basis? I think one of
the answers is that, although it’s fairly easy to
use a gantry system for tillage operations or
even for some other operations in the field
like spraying, there are many other operations
for which the adoption of the gantry system is
not as easy. If you remember during one of
the lectures we had last year, one of my
comments there was that it is fairly difficult to
protect the field from compaction where we
as agricultural engineers always say “all
right, don’t go on the field with a high-
pressure inflated tyres like in trucks”. The
speaker’s answer was that “well, there are no
trucks on the field”, and there was one slide
showing a truck hauling some product out of
the field! So the gantry system is a very nice
approach. There was one Israeli company
that was trying to promote it, but it never
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really caught on. I wonder why can’t we try to
have more comprehensive look at the whole
gantry system, and how at the moment it is
not really catching on.
Theodor FRIEDRICH
I have two comments: the first one connects
directly to the discussion on the gantry, and
also to the comment Prof. Singh made, about
the large weight machines and the economies
of scale. I believe that if we go into systems
with reduced tillage - ideally zero tillage,
under these systems we would have to till only
to decompact the soil to repair the
compaction done by heavy machinery, and I
think the economy of scale discussion could
take on a completely new aspect. That would
probably lead us, also from the economic side,
to identify maximum sizes of machines which
are economically feasible, when we add the
cost of tillage to the large scale machinery
operations. And that would perhaps also be a
new horizon for the gantry technique. The
question asked was why it didn’t catch on:
well it has so far been tried under traditional,
conventional tillage systems. Maybe under
zero tillage systems, where compaction is the
real problem, gantry could have a complete
new horizon. Second comment: Prof. Heege
mentioned the problem that we can’t really
foresee the weather, and I don’t believe really
that meteorology will make such great steps
that we will have a reliable weather forecast.
So my approach would be to make
agricultural farming systems more risk
tolerant. One relevant indication was given in
the paper by Prof. Cavazza, saying that the
infiltration under no-till soils is ten times
higher than under tilled soils. And that is also
what we find, for example in tropical
countries - in Brazil - where there’s a large
history of zero tillage, and it can be seen that
infiltration there is so high that farmers are
doing away with terraces on sloping lands,
because they don’t need them anymore.
It has certainly also a short term impact on
farmers and on the risk of farming. During
the past two years we have received reports
from the no-till association in Brazil, saying
“God bless the Niño effect, because these
catastrophic droughts and rainfalls are really
boosting our attractiveness”, because the
farmers using zero tillage were much less
affected by drought or by heavy rainfall than
the other farmers. And farmers in difficult
weather conditions are now looking more into
reduced tillage systems.
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