Rob wrote:Cam, and Meat,
Thanks! super informative. I'd like to try a set just because. But I still think it'd take a lot of thought to adapt them to night ag.
What about the light bar? We keep them dimmed down pretty much to the max, but I wonder how the NVG's would do with an LED light source 6 feet in front of you?
Another *interesting* moment might come checking the hopper level. We have lights mounted in the hopper that we will hit in the turns now and then to make sure what the flow control says and what is really in the hopper really jive with each other. It's always startling getting in someone else's plane and hitting a switch you thought was the smoker, only to have a ball of light illuminate in front of you![]()
The weight is likely to be a deal breaker for me in the peak season... Although I think they're ugly as sin I have recently switched over from dual lens Gallet helmets to single lens ones. The weight savings makes a huge difference in the neck / shoulder blade tension at the end of a long night. Doubtful I'd want to hang even more weight out there unless it really made an earth shattering difference.




Meat Servo wrote:Only difficulty with your cat skinning is I see is holding the ends from that height? My turn to say not being critical but trying to learn.
Meat Servo wrote:... and are above the working range of lights ....


add the winds that are usually 20 G35mph
180Marty wrote:Did you go look at the field and check the results?
GumpAir wrote:If "X" type of flying job hooks you, it'll take more than a little bumpy air and stinking every day to keep you from doing it.
Welcome to the real world of driving airplanes for a living. It's mostly a lot of hard work, and doing awesome shit that no one but you is gonna know about.
Gump






Not uncommon to have a 1.2 acre job...just one "planting" in a 7 acre "field". Sometimes we spray 3 different mixes in that 7 acre "field" of the same crop 



Another rotorhead cropduster here.
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