Showing posts with label soil moisture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soil moisture. Show all posts

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Don't Let your dog drive your car.....smart control of irrigation.....after you fix the TOP 3.

Storms, Robert and I met yesterday and went over the new sensors coming out and that are currently available from our manufacturer partners.  I wanted to put this out there to the rest of the Cougar world. The future of or water conservation is in smart control and sensors so we are going to see more and more of them on our systems and other systems that we service. In addtion, lots of people have SMART PHONES and SMART THERMOSTATS ( NEST, HoneyWell) and SMART DOOR locks even, so it is inevitable that people want SMART IRRIGATION CONTROLLERS. The problems is smart controllers do no good if the irrigation system is not designed, installed and maintained properly. Programming the controller is also very subjective and cumbersome for someone who does not program controllers on a daily basis,

Some background and how each sensor collects data and uses it to calculate how much to water.

Here is a link to the closest commercial WeatherStation in Austin ( William morris Golf Course)



You can see all the data they collect that gets pulled into the smart control system that then calculates how much water to apply to different areas of the golf course. These are $5,000 weather stations that are monitored and calibrated regularly to keep golf courses perfect.  This is laboratory grade equipment designed for perfection and is overkill for all residential and commercial property we typically service.

Rainbird's WeatherStation is a fraction of that cost and does basically the same thing, using your zip codes historical data, daily temperature readings and effective rainfall (minus the wind and solar coeffients) to calculate ETo.  When the soil reaches MAD ( max allowable depletion that we program aka trigger point ), the controller initiates watering and calculates runtimes and cycle soaks automatically. When there are no restrictions, this controller will water at the correct time and place on random days (good for drip in Austin )

Rainbird has all kinds of videos showing how to use and program this controller.

uses a rainsensor (WET/DRY), Solar Coefficient, temperature and historical data based on regional geographic US watering zones ( 1,2,3,4) to adjust SEASONAL WATERING PERCENTAGES.

The soil moisture sensors pretty much throw all this calculations out the window and just measures the soil moisture in one spot and provides an INTERRUPT ( WET/DRY) signal to allow or disallow watering.   Location of the sensor and calibration is paramount to effectiveness.

Using the Solar Sync and the Soil-Click Moisture sensor IN CONJUNCTION,  we can construct a CYCLE SOAK routine using multiple start times with each start applying 1/4" of water, up to 4 starts a day and allowing the Soil moisture sensor to INTERRRUPT any of the starts once the soil reaches our target set pointpoint.

This is similar to how you fill up your gas tank, you can not overfill, due to the pressure switch in the pump handle. It doesn't matter if your gas tank is on E, 1/4,1/2, or 3/4. A multistart cycle routine will run mulitiple times until it reaches "F" just like a gas pump.

In closing, none of these "SMART" controllers are going to fix the basics of poor irrigation design, bad hydrozoning ( Turf and shrubs on same zone) , poorly matched zones ( sun/shade mixed) and poor maintenance ( heads too low. raise to grade, clogged nozzles )

For LEGACY Systems, we still need to focus primarily on the TOP 3 issues as seen daily in the field

1. OVER-PRESSURE ( Installing PRVs or PRS heads)
2. DISTRIBUTION UNIFORMITY( MP rotators upgrades to replace fixed spray nozzles )
3. EFFICIENCY in BEDS ( Drip conversions )

Once we fix the top 3 items, then we can have  real conversations with our clients about smart control.

On brand new systems that we design,  straight out of the box, these TOP 3 issues are not present, so we can install and be confident that smart control will work properly and effectively.

Thanks for your time.

Monday, February 24, 2014

TexasET Network Landscape Watering Recommendations - "Cougar Central Austin"

If you have not turned on your irrigation system for this season, now it the time to run a  system check and make sure everything is operating properly.  Temperatures were almost 20 degrees Fahrenheit above normal this past week. We are looking at about 40-50% of summer evaporation and transpiration rate.  A lot of shrubs are starting to come out of dormancy and turf grasses along concrete areas are starting to green up due to the warmer soil temperatures along the concrete. Hopefully we will get some rain this week to supplement the already dry conditions. I checked turf soil moisture on my property and the top 2 inches of the soil is pretty dry.  Had to go down to 3" before my soil moisture probe read WET.

Texas A&M AgriLIFE Extension
Texas A&M AgriLIFE Extension
Watering recommendation for "Cougar Central Austin" for the past 7 days:0.41 inches*
DateEToMax TemperatureMin TemperatureMin HumidityTotal Rainfall
02-17-20140.187662200
02-18-20140.147856280
02-19-20140.127861520
02-20-20140.237956140
02-21-20140.166743200
02-22-20140.137245410
02-23-20140.178261320
NOTE: These reported values are hourly averages, not absolute highs and lows.
*Recommendations based on the following parameters (assuming no rainfall):
Adjust this watering recommendation for any rainfall that you have received during this time period.
TexasET Weather Station :Austin (Morris Williams)
Plant Coefficient :Warm Season
Adjustment factor :Normal