Friday, July 25, 2008

No Irrigation Today - The Canoe Trip Was Fun

Nothing to do with irrigation or lawn sprinklers today. The whole company went on a canoe trip down Blackwater River. It was a nice 11 mile stretch. It was a nice workout and great to get out in the wilderness. I had a great time and hope everyone else on the team did as well.

Back to irrigation work tomorrow. Good night.

Scott
http://www.autolawnsprinklers.com

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Residnetial Sprinkler Lawn Irrigation Sprinikler System

The e-book and other information in my website offers covers the best design, plan, and application for residential landscape / lawn irrigation systems. Commercial systems can be slightly different depending on the actual size and application of the project.

But, for your average yard my e-book does a great job at simplifying the process 0f designing, planning, and building your automatic irrigation systems. I can show you the basics, while condensing the information so that you still thoroughly understand it without too much extra "full" of other information that you don't need to do.

I strongly believe that you will benefit from the unique irrigation information contained on my website and I guarantee that you will see an improvement on your planning, designing, installing, and maintaining your irrigation system.

Scott Young
http://www.autolawnsprinklers.com

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Another Pressure Tank Irrigation Problem

Pressure tanks are great for the proper applications, but too often I run into a system that should have utilized a pump-start relay instead of a pressure tank. But pressure tanks are great for house water or for any on-demand water system.

Pressure tanks eventually go bad. The diaphragms or bladders inside them go bad and they no longer continue to hold air pressure. The tanks naturally loose air due to attrition (natural air loss) over time and may just need a re-boost or re-fill to the proper air pressure level.

You need a typical or standard tire pressure gauge to do this. You also need to determine the pressure switch's cut-on and cut-off pressure. This can be determined first by looking at the inside cover of the pressure switch cover, and then verified by measuring the air pressure in the tank when the pump cuts on and cuts off.

As a rule of thumb, I adjust the tanks to 2psi less than the pressure switch cut on/off psi adjustments. For instance, if you have a typical 30/50psi switch then I will set the air in the pressure tank to 28 psi to cut on and thus will cut the system off at approximately 48 psi. This was taught to me by a well driller that I worked with for many years.

I do not recommend the use of pressure tanks with horizontal centrifugal pumps! Without adjusting the spread screw just right, you wil have problems. and this can prove to be more difficult than it seems; trust me, if I have been through this many times! I centrifugal pump will only get up to like 40 - 45 psi. A jet pump will run from 50 - 70 psi typically depending on system design and volume of water source. This makes using pressure switches on jet pumps much easier.

With submersible pumps and jet pumps, pressure tanks and pressure switches can be beneficial if designed, sized, and used correctly. The whole point of a pressure tank is too reduce stress on the pump. But if your pump is continuously turning on and off then you are causing more harm to your pump then if it just runs longer. This happens when a tank is undersized or used with the wrong type of well and pump setup.

For irrigation systems, a like using pump-start relays instead of pressure tanks. For house water or on-demand water systems, then a pressure tank is necessary. Just make sure that if you are doing this yourself, that you consult with your irrigation supplier to make sure that you get the right parts, do not under-size your tank, and get the correct pressure switch needed for your particular water application.


Scotthttp://www.autolawnsprinklers.com