The objective of the MSc project was to improve fruit quality, i.e. fruit firmness, colour and size, by mechanical blossom thinning. Ten-year-old slender spindle apple cv. 'Gala, Mondial' trees at Campus Klein-Altendorf near Bonn, Germany with an intense flowering of 7-8 on the 0-9 scale were blossom-thinned on 21 April 2009; un-thinned trees served as control. Rotor speeds were 360 rpm or 420 rpm at 5 or 7.5 km/h tractor speed using the new mechanical thinning device developed at the University of Bonn in 2004-2006. Therein, a vertical mast supports three horizontal rotors, whose vertically rotating tines remove excessive flowers; the device was mounted on the front three point hitch of the tractor with the following results: 1. Mechanical thinning reduced the number of apple fruit from 18 per branch section in the un-thinned control, 12-13 in the medium to 8 fruit in the strongest thinning (420 rpm, 5 km/h). 2. Similarly, the number of singlets (one fruitlet/flower cluster) nearly doubled from ca. 2 per branch in the control to 3-4 after mechanical thinning, as intended. 3. The natural June drop after mechanical thinning resembled that in the un-thinned control. 4. Mechanical thinning increased fruit mass by 20 g-48 g relative to the un-thinned control. 5. Mechanical thinning with 420 rpm increased the portion of premium fruit >70 mm (class I) by 43 % (7.5 km/h) and 63 % (5 km/h); combined mechanical and handthinning yielded the largest portion of fruit >70 mm (70 %), but with a dramatic loss in yield (55 %). 6. Mechanical and manual thinning improved the portion of well coloured fruit (75-100 % coloured) (78-98 %) when compared to the un-thinned control fruits with 55 %, probably due to selective removal of shaded fruits from the inner tree canopy. 7. Overall, mechanical thinning alone gave better results than hand thinning alone or its combination with hand-thinning in cv. 'Gala'; mechanical thinning waived the need for hand thinning in this experiment. 8. Mechanical thinning improved fruit firmness from 9.4 kg/cm(2) in the un-thinned control to 10.4 kg/cm(2). 9. Neither vegetative growth nor subsequent fruit drop were stimulated by this type of mechanical thinning. 10. The risk of both alternate bearing and over-sized fruit was waived due to the variety employed. 11. An economic evaluation showed a net profit of (sic) 220/ha in the weak (420 rpm-7.5 km/h) avo (sic) 1,844/ha in the intermediate (360 rpm-5 km/h), but a net loss of (sic) 1,120/ha (420 rpm-5 km/h) for the strongest thinning treatment, assuming a cost of (sic) 120/ha for the mechanical treatment and a saving of (sic) 200 for reduced hand thinning. Overall, the positive results of a better fruit quality (size, colour and firmness) offer the potential of mechanical blossom thinning in cv. 'Gala', which is difficult to blossom-thin chemically.