[net.garden] more sprinkler technology recommendations

reid@Glacier.ARPA (Brian Reid) (04/30/85)

Like Mike Klein, I have installed a fairly extensive automatic sprinkling
and drip irrigation system over the last couple of years. I am an inveterate
tinkerer and keep trying to find ways to improve it. I'm certainly going to
run out and buy a Rain Jet sprinkler head and use it to replace one of my
Champion heads. I'll report if my experiences differ from Mike's at all.

I would like to add 3 more recommendations for specific technology.

(1) Rain Master controllers. Rain Master is a company in Simi Valley
(California) whose primary business has been agricultural irrigation
systems; they have recently branched out into residential controllers.  I
tried 2 different controllers (Richdel and Rain Bird) before switching to
the big time and buying a Rain Master. My RM-11 controller has 11 different
channels, of which I am currently only using 7. It also has 3 different
"programs" (a program, in sprinkler-controller talk, is a sequence of
actions that can be independently scheduled). It has no limit on the length
of time that one station can be turned on (drip lines like to run for a long
time), it has a queueing system built into it so that if you want your
fuschia misters to come on every two hours, except that once a week your
established-plant sprinkler comes on for 30 minutes, and that 30-minute
period overlaps the start time of the fuschia misters, the misters will just
be queued until the sprinkler is done.  Finally, the RM controllers come in
battleship-grade steel boxes that can be mounted outside and connected
directly to 110V, instead of having to have an interior-mounted transformer
running 24V to the controller, as most of the cheaper ones do.

(2) Adjustable pressure regulators made by Rain Drip. These are the only
pressure regulators worth using. Almost all of the other "pressure
regulators" are really volume limiters, and when you install more than N
drippers on line circuit you have to make sure that you have a volume
limiter that will permit N gallons per hour to go through the pipe. The Rain
Drip adjustable regulator is a true pressure regulator, and has a
2-inch-diameter dial gauge on it to show you the pressure; you can get
exactly 10psi or 20psi or whatever you want, regardless of the incoming
pressure and regardless of the number of drippers on the line.

(3) Addimix Automatic Fertilizing System. I have recently installed one on
one of my sprinkler lines, and am about to install it on another. This
wonderful $20 gadget is a plastic bottle that taps into a pressure line
after the backflow regulator to inject a metered amount of liquid fertilizer
into the system. It isn't necessary for drip lines, because the drip
companies all make good solid-fertilizer dissolver chambers, but for
sprinklers it is a big win. Manufactured by Fradel Enterprises, 346 So.
Woodrow, Fresno CA 93702. (209) 251-5563. I have model 204-Q, but I don't
think they make more than one model.

-- 
	Brian Reid	decwrl!glacier!reid
	Stanford	reid@SU-Glacier.ARPA