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Simcha Blass (Hebrew: שמחה בלאס; November 27, 1897 – July 18, 1982) was a Polish-Israeli engineer and inventor who developed the modern drip irrigation system with his son Yeshayahu. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Simcha Blass (1897–1982), Polish-Israeli engineer and inventor; Simcha Bunim Alter (1898–1992) Simcha Bunim Cohen, Orthodox rabbi and author; Simcha Bunim of Peshischa (1765–1827), key leader of Hasidic Judaism in Poland; Simcha Dinitz (1929–2003), Israeli statesman and politician; Simcha Eichenstein (born 1983), American politician
Bill Blass (1922–2002), American fashion designer; Dave Blass, American production designer; Friedrich Blass (1843–1907), German classical scholar; Moses Blass (born 1937), Brazilian Olympic basketball medallist; Simcha Blass, (1897–1982), Israeli water engineer, inventor of drip irrigation systems; Steve Blass, baseball player and announcer
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Usage of a plastic emitter in drip irrigation was developed in Israel by Simcha Blass and his son Yeshayahu. [6] Instead of releasing water through tiny holes easily blocked by tiny particles, water was released through larger and longer passageways by using friction to slow water inside a plastic emitter.
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Chief engineer of the Mekorot Simcha Blass, who later became known as the inventor of the drip irrigation system, designed a water pipeline to the northern Negev. On the night of October 5–6, 1946, after the Yom Kippur fast, the settlers, including members of Kibbutz Ruhama and Gvulot, set up camp at eleven pre-determined locations in the Negev.