10-04-2017, 09:56 AM
A rice transplanter is a specialized transplantor installed to transplant the rice seedlings into the rice field. Mainly two types of rice transplanter, ie type of riding and type of walking. The type of riding is usually driven and can transplant six lines in a single pass. On the other hand, the type of walking is manually driven and can generally transplant four lines in one step.
Although rice is grown in areas other than Asia, rice transplanters are mainly used in the east, southeast and south Asia. This is because rice can be grown without transplanting, simply by sowing seeds in the field, and farmers from outside Asia prefer this path without complications at the expense of reduced yield.
A common rice transplanter comprises:
• a tray of seedlings such as a shed roof on which the paddy-type rice nursery is installed;
• a seedling tray changer that moves the seedling tray like a typewriter cart; Y
• plastic forks that pick up a seedling from a rug-type nursery in the seedling tray and place the seedling in the soil, as if the seedling were taken between human fingers.
Transplanting the machine using rice transplants requires considerably less time and labor than manual transplantation. It increases the approximate area a person can plant from 700 to 10,000 square meters per day.
However, rice transplanters are considerably expensive for almost all small Asian farmers. Rice transplanters are popular in industrialized countries where the cost of labor is high, for example in South Korea. Now it is also getting popularity in the South Asian countries as the crisis transplant of working time is in its selection.
Rice transplanters first developed in Japan in the 1960s, while the first attempt to mechanize rice transplantation dates back to the late nineteenth century. In Japan, the development and spread of rice transplants progressed rapidly during the 1970s and 1980s.
Although rice is grown in areas other than Asia, rice transplanters are mainly used in the east, southeast and south Asia. This is because rice can be grown without transplanting, simply by sowing seeds in the field, and farmers from outside Asia prefer this path without complications at the expense of reduced yield.
A common rice transplanter comprises:
• a tray of seedlings such as a shed roof on which the paddy-type rice nursery is installed;
• a seedling tray changer that moves the seedling tray like a typewriter cart; Y
• plastic forks that pick up a seedling from a rug-type nursery in the seedling tray and place the seedling in the soil, as if the seedling were taken between human fingers.
Transplanting the machine using rice transplants requires considerably less time and labor than manual transplantation. It increases the approximate area a person can plant from 700 to 10,000 square meters per day.
However, rice transplanters are considerably expensive for almost all small Asian farmers. Rice transplanters are popular in industrialized countries where the cost of labor is high, for example in South Korea. Now it is also getting popularity in the South Asian countries as the crisis transplant of working time is in its selection.
Rice transplanters first developed in Japan in the 1960s, while the first attempt to mechanize rice transplantation dates back to the late nineteenth century. In Japan, the development and spread of rice transplants progressed rapidly during the 1970s and 1980s.