Equipment

Photo courtesy of ND Atmospheric Resource Board
Ground Generator
Silver Iodide ground generators release microscopic particles in or below cloud base which act as a nucleus for ice crystals to form, spurring precipitation development.

Photo courtesy of ND Atmospheric Resource Board
Wing-tip seeding generator
Airplane-mounted seeding generators are used primarily on summer cloudseeding programs and a few winter programs. They are operated either directly below cloud in the updraft, or in-cloud usually during winter operations in less turbulent conditions.

Photo courtesy of ND Atmospheric Resource Board
End-burning flares
Burn-in-place, or end-burning flares emit a fine silver iodide smoke similar to that from ground-based or wing-tip mounted generators.

Photo courtesy of Utah Division of Water Resources
Propane generator
Gound-based propane generators work by virtue of propane's extremely cold temperature. They instantly condense and freeze liquid water droplets in super-cooled clouds.

Photo courtesy of ND Atmospheric Resource Board
Hygroscopic flares
Hygroscopic flares like these are used in a similar fashion to silver iodide flares, but supply clouds with condensation nuclei to grow raindrops without the need for a freezing process.

Photo courtesy of ND Atmospheric Resource Board
Dry ice pellets
Dry ice pellets are used on some cloud seeding programs. They are typically dropped by airplanes in convective clouds during summer seeding programs to induce ice formation earlier than it would occur naturally. They act differently than silver iodide particles as they freeze supercooled droplets via thermal shock instead of providing a crystalline nucleus. To see a demonstration of how dry ice seeding works, go to the Seeding Methods section on this web site.