How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them??

   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them??
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Thanks AT. :)

Like most projects, it seems like you have to become a mini "expert" on the subject to get the job done correctly.

All this info is for sure a great help! Not near an expert but I'm learning.

I appreciate the info and defenately will ask.

Not gonna lie....I dread this job, but it needs doing non the less. Beats paying someone else to do it....for sure. :thumbsup:

The faulty solenoid issue I still have to look into more. We don't have one centralized access pannel to all the zones. For whatever reason there are multiple pannels. Now I have to find the right one for this zone. More fun. :laughing:
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #12  
Make sure you dig up or unscrew a sprinkler for closer inspection before you buy anything. The riser you illustrated has a thread at both ends. Most likely that will not be suitable on its own. You may also need to buy an additional joiner thats internally threaded. As I recall, my sprinklers have a female thread that screws onto the male T piece thats in the line. In that case a riser thats threaded at both ends is unsuitable without the additional female joiner.

By the way, you can cut those threaded risers in half and get two out of them if you are only raising the level a few inches.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #13  
Thanks AT. :)
The faulty solenoid issue I still have to look into more. We don't have one centralized access pannel to all the zones. For whatever reason there are multiple pannels. Now I have to find the right one for this zone. More fun. :laughing:

When you find the bank of solenoids, just loosen the small screw on top. That will trigger the sprinkler without having to go back to the timer box.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #14  
One other question is whether you even need risers. The couple of systems I'm familiar with used flexible black poly pipe in the ground, not that rigid white plastic shown in your pic of the riser. With the poly pipe you may only need to dig a foot or two either side of the sprinkler in order to get to get access to enough pipe to pull the whole sprinkler upwards a few inches. This sounds like hard work but actually it can be easier than trying to unscrew sprinklers and fitting risers without getting dirt in the pipes. Believe me thats a real pain.

(Using the method described above is very easy on sprinklers that are at the end of a line.)
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #15  
I am an retired irrigation contractor. Many of the suggestions on here are valid, and helpful, but not entirely relevant. Here is how I would approach your problem. First, as to raising the heads. There is a very economical product called swing pipe, or funny pipe. It is not poly pipe, but it is black, and often has a blue stripe, think water. Swing pipe utilizes barbed fittings on one end, and a pipe thread on the other. A one foot section of swing pipe with two barbed x mipt, 90o elbows is all you need at each head. In layman's terms, that is male iron pipe thread. One of the male fittings goes into the female fitting in the ground, the other into the sprinkler head. You need to excavate around the fitting in order to give yourself enough room to rotate the barbed fitting, pipe and sprinkler head already attached, into the new fitting. I always assemble everything possible, above ground, (less stooping, and bending). You now have a flexible fitting that can be easily allow your sprinkler head to be set flush.

As to the missing heads, go to the valve for that zone, and manually activate the valve. If you hear water running, simply wait long enough to see a geyser in the lawn. The water will find the weakest spot in the lawn, and that head will be the first to create a mound that given enough time, (minutes), or in some cases, break through the soil.

Check you connections, as solenoids rarely go bad. To test them, when the circuit is turned on at the clock, touch the top with a small magnet. You should get an attraction. Also, you may take the solenoid from a good valve, and place it into the suspect valve, or vice versa.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #16  
Good suggestion Achingback. (You can't beat experience) . The point I think is that raising sprinklers using risers is not ideal. Its difficult to do it accurately, and you have no flexibily for future adjustments. Far better to put each head on the end of a 1 foot peice of tube thats lies to the side of the main pipe. Then you aways have a lot of flexibility to easily moved it up or down as required. Perhaps it can also be done cheaply with 90º poly fittings and poly pipe.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #17  
You can also do it with fittings known as street elbows. They are a 90o fitting with a male on one end, and a female on the other. You would use two of them per head. Excavate around the head to keep dirt out, install the two street elbows you have already screwed together, ( not teflon tape needed), into your female fitting in the ground. Flush the system to remove debris, and install the head. The stree els should have brought your heads to the proper level. If not, you can add as many as you need. Personally, I would use the flexible swing pipe with the barbed fittings. It isn't very expensive, and you are only doing this once over the life of the system. Believe it or not, due to the process of the development of thatch, your heads are seeminly going to sink into the ground over time. The heads won't have move, but the structure of the lawn will have raise. The swing pipe will easily allow you to excavate, and once again raise the heads. We are talking about several years before you should have to do this.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them??
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Thank you for the info AchingBack. :thumbsup:

Agree, I don't think the heads have sunk so much as the yard has grown around/over them.

Is this common? I assume it is, seems like it's unavoidable....but I don't see neighbors out digging up their yards to fix the issue??

Sounds like I'll have to "fix" this problem every so many years (been 5 since the system was installed)?

If so...I've decided right now...I hate my sprinkler system.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them?? #19  
I didn't notice if you mentioned the heads being the pop up type. If they aren't, change them over. If they are, how high do they extend? You should have at least a 3 -4 " pop up.
 
   / How to raise sprinkler heads + how to find them??
  • Thread Starter
#20  
I didn't notice if you mentioned the heads being the pop up type. If they aren't, change them over. If they are, how high do they extend? You should have at least a 3 -4 " pop up.

Yes, they are pop up and they do extend probably 4". But, now when the heads are down they are 2 inches below the surface so when they do pop up they are only 2 inches above ground.
 

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