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The last 4 posts

Monday, June 6th 2011, 4:43pm

by worachj

You’ll need to know the layout of your pipe and contour of the yard. Water without pressure will always drain to the lowest point. Each sprinkler head could be a low point. To eliminate the drainage you would need to replace each sprinkler head with ones that have a check valve. I wouldn’t worry about it, unless the drainage is causing a problem or the noise irritates you.

If you want to keep water in the pipe you'll need a check valve at every sprinkler head that drains.

Monday, June 6th 2011, 2:53pm

by CMD

How do I know which one is the lowest sprinkler head? I would assume that the one spitting air is the highest as the air is finding its way to the highest point in the system? Can the check valve be installed in this one since it is the one exhibiting the problem or do I need to somehow find the lowest one and install it there?

Monday, June 6th 2011, 11:16am

by worachj

Sounds like the water in the pipe is draining out by gravity at the lowest sprinkler head. If it’s a problem or an irritation you can install check valves or sprinkler heads with check valves to stop the water from draining.

Monday, June 6th 2011, 8:41am

by CMD

Sprinkler Heads spitting air.

In my Hunter sprinkler system I have couple of rotary heads in one zone that spit air for the first 20+ seconds the zone is on. I believe a total of three do this, but one is much worse than the other two. The three heads are in different sections of the front yard and are not next to each other.
What would cause them to spit air at the start like this? Could this just be a head problem or is this zone loosing pressure somewhere? I do not see water coming up from the ground anywhere.