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The last 9 posts

Thursday, May 17th 2007, 6:46pm

by lush96

well if you want a brass nozzle that bad on a plastic pop-up, go ahead. should still use rotors in an area that size.

Wednesday, May 16th 2007, 3:48am

by Wet_Boots

no brass head - just the brass nozzle on a standard plastic popup

Tuesday, May 15th 2007, 7:37pm

by lush96

man you people cant read. i said installing the head can be finiky, not the nozzle. i mean that they tend to stick more than a plastic one if it is installed a little to low. now a pro wouldnt have a problem with this, but a home owner may. but like i said, if your looking to throw 17-20 feet, use a rotor with a low angle nozzle.

Tuesday, May 15th 2007, 3:28am

by Tom

the weathermatic brass nozzles will screw on in place of plastic nozzles on both the rainbird spray heads and hunter spray heads

Tuesday, May 15th 2007, 3:25am

by Tom

how is a brass nozzle a finiky install?

Monday, May 14th 2007, 8:05pm

by lush96

brass are also very expensive as compared to plastic although if they are installed correctly, they will last much longer than plastic. but its a very finiky install. honestly if you are looking to cover a 17 or 20 foot area....... a rotor with a low angle nozzle will do much better unless you are just a big fan of sprays.

Saturday, May 12th 2007, 4:58am

by Tom

weathermatic has brass nozzles that offer spray distances of 20' and more. they do however eat up lots of gpm

Wednesday, May 9th 2007, 6:47pm

by jmduke7

I am unaware of a fixed arc nozzle with a radius of 17'. You may be thinking of the adjustable arc nozzle with a 17' radius.

http://www.sprinklerwarehouse.com/detail.aspx?ID=257

Wednesday, May 9th 2007, 6:16pm

by twhite4014

spray nozzle radius

The info on the Hunter fixed spray nozzles lists a 17 ft nozzle. Does SprinklerWarehouse carry this? The online store only lists the 15 ft.