any recommendation on timer that can be set for 5 times a day watering? most i see can only be set for three times/day. 
so i have five zones with above ground sprinklers. i can't figure out how to time them so i can water atleast 5 times and these sprinklers man only do 3times/day. :xgm560 said:How many zones do you need? The b-hyve can probably do this but its pretty expensive and really expensive for multiple zones.
Is this a hose end timer? It sounds like a sprinkler controller, but if it is a hose end I think that is exactly what the OP is looking for so post a link if you can.Sonoran Desert Lawn said:Rainbird handles my zones 6 times a day. The older models had schedules and you could overlap those for a total of 24 times a day
haha - It's never one trip.gm560 said:and a trip or 2 to home depot for fittings.
Not saying this is the best/cleanest solution, but if you can't find a single unit that does what you need you could always rig up two timers in parallel such that one unit handles the first 3 scheduled runs and the second unit handles another 2-3 runs.jackallis said:so i have five zones with above ground sprinklers. i can't figure out how to time them so i can water atleast 5 times and these sprinklers man only do 3times/day. :x
this is intense but might have to go this way. thanks Ware.Ware said:jackallis said:any recommendation on timer that can be set for 5 times a day watering? most i see can only be set for three times/day.
Not saying this is the best/cleanest solution, but if you can't find a single unit that does what you need you could always rig up two timers in parallel such that one unit handles the first 3 scheduled runs and the second unit handles another 2-3 runs.jackallis said:so i have five zones with above ground sprinklers. i can't figure out how to time them so i can water atleast 5 times and these sprinklers man only do 3times/day. :x
For illustrative purposes here is sketch of a 3 zone setup using 2 timers and garden hose splitters, but you could probably save some money and pressure loss by using PVC tees with 3/4 male and female GHT adapters since there would be no need to close any of the paths to accomplish your goal. To plumb it all together you could use a cheap/donor hose and some inexpensive hose mender ends.
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Some digital timers can be set to water at a certain interval for a period of time.jackallis said:so i have five zones with above ground sprinklers. i can't figure out how to time them so i can water atleast 5 times and these sprinklers man only do 3times/day. :xgm560 said:How many zones do you need? The b-hyve can probably do this but its pretty expensive and really expensive for multiple zones.
This is what I did. Both in terms of building it as an above ground system and then repurposing it as an in ground system.g-man said:Some members buy an irrigation controller (eg rachio) and in ground valves and make an above ground setups with hoses (or some PVC pipes). The main benefit is that you can use these for an in ground setup in the future.
It's a little ridiculous that an app-driven smart controller doesn't make this stupid-simple to setup. But it's possible to do with a single fixed schedule.spaceman_spiff said:Rachio 3 has a fixed schedule set up for "every X hours." If you wanted, like, 8am, noon, 1pm, 3pm, 3:30pm, or something that's not "every X hours," it makes it a bit more difficult and you'd probably need separate fixed schedules. This is what I do for when I'm watering new seed. I set up 3 schedules, one for 8am, one for noon, and one for 4pm because I don't want it running every 4 hours all day or whatever.
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Actually, right after I made that post, I saw a Rachio forum post on how to do the cycle and soak thing. Pretty clever!MasterMech said:It's a little ridiculous that an app-driven smart controller doesn't make this stupid-simple to setup. But it's possible to do with a single fixed schedule.spaceman_spiff said:Rachio 3 has a fixed schedule set up for "every X hours." If you wanted, like, 8am, noon, 1pm, 3pm, 3:30pm, or something that's not "every X hours," it makes it a bit more difficult and you'd probably need separate fixed schedules. This is what I do for when I'm watering new seed. I set up 3 schedules, one for 8am, one for noon, and one for 4pm because I don't want it running every 4 hours all day or whatever.
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For a single "Grow-In" schedule that doesn't water all night - you need a fixed, daily schedule. Use the Cycle/Soak feature to create intermissions between events all rolled into one long daily cycle.
Described under "Hourly Interval using Cycle and Soak"
https://support.rachio.com/en_us/new-seeding-schedule-SJ_FwIktD