A few more notes i forgot to mention. From what I can tell all valves are 1", all laterals are 1" and all sprinklers connect to 1/2" funny pipe from the laterals.
As of right now the areas with MPs are just using standard Hunter Pro Spray bodies.g-man said:Welcome to TLF.
How are you measuring the psi at the heads? When swapping to the mp, do you plan to swap the bodies to the regulated ones?
Do the valves have flow controls?
I was afraid of this. I moved into this home with the irrigation already installed. We have always had pressure issues in the house if the irrigation is running. Mostly noticed whenEcks from Tex said:If I'm in your shoes, my first concern would be that the GPM from my house is not accurate. Irrigation tutorials also cautions against the bucket test. Normally I don't think it would matter if you weren't having an issue, but I think in your situation you've got to play detective, so to speak, and go back to the source. That probably requires you calling your water provider to get supply information (I have done this as well) and then figuring out how to get the most accurate reading at your house.mnikon said:The GPM was done based on pipe size from irrigation tutorials. I also confirmed with a bucket test. The system pressure was taken from the spigot on the irrigation mainline. Each head was tested by placing the gauge inline @ each head in the zone.
My worry is that you don't have the pressure you need. Pressure regulated bodies and flow control valves may be in your future, but before you go fixing problems you aren't sure you have, I'd get the most accurate numbers I can.
This is a great suggestion! Funny how one can overlook things. For clarification when you say "Open the meter" are you refering to a spigot? Or something else?g-man said:I would do the meter test. Open the meter and record the number. Trigger irrigation and run it for 10mim (without anything else in the house running). Record the second number and calculate your gpm that way.
Zone 6 is the only zone with 6 PGPs. Yes they work but only @ 20psi. Zone 8 is 6 MP rotator side strips. Zones 1,7,8 all run fine @ 40psi. Im assuming from the lower gpm consumed by the side strips and SRs. It's only zones where PGPs were initially installed I'm getting 20psi. Including the front zones 2 and 3 where I have swapped PGPs out for MP rotator 3000s. Thank you for the clarification on opening the meter. I will see what I can do with this as I'm in MN and our meters are in the basement to prevent freeze. Mine is burried in a closet unfortunately. May be messy to open the meter up. The theoretical GPM for zones 7 and 8 is only 2.6GPM😔. Theoretical for zone 1 is only 2.3GPM. That seems silly low.g-man said:Zone 6 and 8 have 6 pgp and they are all working? Have you calculated the theoretical GPM for those zones?
Open the meter means going to the yard and finding the metal top that the water company has the water meter at. The meter has the CCF of water measurements.
Yes indeed the basement due to deep winter freezes in MN. They have a wireless transmitter connected to it so they can drive by and read your meter monthly. Cool huh?g-man said:Wait the water company goes to your basement every month to bill you? I don't think the meter could be in the basement.
There is a relationship between gpm and pressure drop. As you flow more water it will drop more pressure (more friction with the pipes). Switch to MP will be a positive thing to do since they are lower flow.
I would dig unfortunately water mains are 6ft+ deep here due to deep freeze in winter. Meter comes into the basement under slab.Ecks from Tex said:I'd you know how much the water co supplies you, and what your pressure is at the house, you can probably figure that out.mnikon said:Almost wondering if theres an issue with my supply line in the yard feeding the house. 2.6GPM cant be legit can it?
And you could go dig a small hole at the main and see how big the line is. I'm wondering if the installers put in a small line
3/4" main in, 5/8" meter, 3/4" main out. However, the irrigation is at the tail end of the house main. So everything in the house comes off the main before it heads outside to the irrigation. Changes to 1" out of home to the irrigation after shutoff valve in basement. Not sure if it being @ the end of the main has any affect?Ecks from Tex said:What size line feeds the meter?mnikon said:I would dig unfortunately water mains are 6ft+ deep here due to deep freeze in winter. Meter comes into the basement under slab.Ecks from Tex said:I'd you know how much the water co supplies you, and what your pressure is at the house, you can probably figure that out.
And you could go dig a small hole at the main and see how big the line is. I'm wondering if the installers put in a small line
There is a 50psi pressure regulator after the meter. I've wondered if that could be the culprit but wasn't 100% sure as I get a static PSI @ 50. It's not until the irrigation is running that the psi drops to 20psi on most zones and the mainline itself.g-man said:That should be plenty of gpm. Could you have a pressure reducing valve?
:thumbup: Good info. Looks like maybe I'll look into the pressure regulator, could be it after all. God only knows how old it is. House was built in 1959. It certainly seems to be a supply issue of some sort. I just had to be sure I wasn't going crazy cause ive reverse engineered this thing in my head about a million times now.g-man said:I would check on it. As the flow increases thru the regulator, the will be a pressure drop. I googled this one (Apollo brand) so you could see a 12psi drop with a 10gpm flow. You will need to check yours.
http://sprinklertalk.com/manuals/conbraco/IOM_36c.pdf
I would increase it to 55psi static. Other things to check, clog filters.
I dont appear to have any in line filters before the valves. Unless they're buried before the valve boxes. Irrigation comes out of house to backflow preventer then there's a hose spigot then straight into the ground to the valves.Ecks from Tex said:Yeah that's a huge red flag to me. And I bet you've got an old in line filter close by too or at the valves. I would at a minimum check both, clear filters and increase regulated pressure. But I would also consider replacing them with something newer from sprinkler warehouse.com if feasible.mnikon said::thumbup: Good info. Looks like maybe I'll look into the pressure regulator, could be it after all. God only knows how old it is. House was built in 1959. It certainly seems to be a supply issue of some sort. I just had to be sure I wasn't going crazy cause ive reverse engineered this thing in my head about a million times now.g-man said:I would check on it. As the flow increases thru the regulator, the will be a pressure drop. I googled this one (Apollo brand) so you could see a 12psi drop with a 10gpm flow. You will need to check yours.
http://sprinklertalk.com/manuals/conbraco/IOM_36c.pdf
I would increase it to 55psi static. Other things to check, clog filters.