Karl Th. RENIUS
Germany
I would like to provide some better guidelines
for developing countries. I remember there
was a publication, 40 years ago, with
diagrams which, taking as inputs the soil type,
initial bulk density, moisture content and
normal pressure on the soil, give the porosity
as an output. And there is a lot of information
on the critical porosity, which is between 42%
and 46-48%, so if you get this information out
of these diagrams, you have a first guideline. I
wonder that these diagrams are not more
used, perhaps many people have already
forgotten about them, but the quality is very
good.
Jaime ORTIZ-CAÑAVATE
Spain
First, just a small point about the excellent
paper by Prof. Heege - I think in figure 4 the
units should be revolutions per minute, rather
than hertz per minute. I also want to make a
comment about the gantry. We have been
hearing about the gantry tractor for a long
time, the first on these types of tractors dates
back maybe 20 years and - well - everyone
likes the idea, I think it’s a very bright idea,
but my question is: is that real? Can it be
used by real farmers? How many gantry
tractors are sold commercially? From my
point of view, compaction is very important
subject, and there are maybe other
approaches that I would like to comment, like
the rubber-track tractors which have been
developed by Caterpillar and John Deere.
They are very good for the soil. I like the idea
of gantry tractors, but my opinion is that the
real farmer is not able to use this bright idea.
Tim CHAMEN
I understand they’ve been around for a long
time, in fact since 1855. But recently they’ve
not really had a major input from a big
86
manufacturer. And that’s, I think, the key to
developing the engineering to make them
truly practical, flexible and farmer-friendly.
I’m still hopeful that that’s going to happen in
the next few years, that we will see a
significant input of money to develop them
properly, for the market. I think they will be
there alongside other systems. Track systems,
as Ortiz Canavate says, are developing day by
day, and we are seeing much larger
introduction of these type of systems now...
Can I just lead on from that to the question
raised by Prof. Singh, regarding best practice
advice for compaction. Probably you are not
aware, most of you, but there is a European
Union concerted action taking place at the
moment on subsoil compaction, looking at
how many soils are vulnerable, if they are
vulnerable how much damage they are
sustaining, and what to do about it. And part
of our remit within that concerted action
group is to come up with best practice advice
for farmers, to address the problems that are
likely to be associated with subsoil
compaction.
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