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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Very basic spraying question
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<blockquote data-quote="novatech" data-source="post: 1013158" data-attributes="member: 5494"><p>I found that dish soap is higher than the recommended surfactant. Secondly most dish soaps are anionic. But I have used it and all went well.</p><p>"According to the definition of nonionic and anionic, the two types of surfactant would attach to different ingredients in the herbicide. </p><p>What does this mean? I take it to mean that nonionic surfactant is intended to bind with a specific chemical in the solution.. so substituting the dish soap as the surfactant, which is an anionic, it would bind with different ingredients than intended and in fact May render the solution inert, or useless since the wrong surfactant was used. "</p><p></p><p>Im no chemist but just by looking up the question "The difference between anionic and nonionic." Thats what i gather. </p><p></p><p>I thought most glyphosate included the surfactant. Roundup in particular and also what ever brand is sold at TSC.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="novatech, post: 1013158, member: 5494"] I found that dish soap is higher than the recommended surfactant. Secondly most dish soaps are anionic. But I have used it and all went well. "According to the definition of nonionic and anionic, the two types of surfactant would attach to different ingredients in the herbicide. What does this mean? I take it to mean that nonionic surfactant is intended to bind with a specific chemical in the solution.. so substituting the dish soap as the surfactant, which is an anionic, it would bind with different ingredients than intended and in fact May render the solution inert, or useless since the wrong surfactant was used. " Im no chemist but just by looking up the question "The difference between anionic and nonionic." Thats what i gather. I thought most glyphosate included the surfactant. Roundup in particular and also what ever brand is sold at TSC. [/QUOTE]
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Very basic spraying question
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