Drip Irrigation
Definition:
Drip irrigation works by applying water
slowly, directly to the soil. The high efficiency of drip irrigation results
from two primary factors. The first is that the water soaks into the soil
before it can evaporate or run off. The second is that the water is only
applied where it is needed, (at the plant's roots) rather than sprayed
everywhere. While drip systems are simple and pretty forgiving of errors in
design and installation.
Advantages:
Drip irrigation is the
most efficient method of irrigating. It is much less wasted water! For this
reason drip is the preferred method of irrigation in the desert regions in the
world. But drip irrigation has other benefits which make it useful almost
anywhere. It is easy to install, easy to design, can be very inexpensive, and
can reduce disease problems associated with high levels of moisture on some
plants. Prevents
extreme temperature fluctuations which result from wet/dry cycles of other
watering methods. Reduces water loss by up to 60%.
Requires little or no time for changing irrigation sets and
only about half as much water as furrow or sprinkler irrigation because water
is delivered drop by drop at the base of the plants.
By using drip irrigation effectively, you can:
water roots, not weeds
increase the size and
quality of plants
conserve water
lower utility bills
practice organic
gardening
decrease fertilizer
& chemical leaching
minimize weeds &
labor
DISADVANTAGES:
Is not well suited for
solid plantings of shallow-rooted plants such as grass and some ground covers.
More about Drip Irrigation
Background
Drip
irrigation is the most efficient method of irrigating. While sprinkler systems
are around 75-85% efficient, drip systems typically are 90% or higher. What
that means is much less wasted water! For this reason drip is the preferred
method of irrigation in the desert regions of the United States. But drip
irrigation has other benefits which make it useful almost anywhere. It is easy
to install, easy to design, can be very inexpensive, and can reduce disease
problems associated with high levels of moisture on some plants. If you want to
grow a rain forest, however, drip might not be the best choice!
Drip irrigation (sometimes called trickle irrigation) works by applying water
slowly, directly to the soil. The high efficiency of drip irrigation results
from two primary factors. The first is that the water soaks into the soil
before it can evaporate or run off. The second is that the water is only
applied where it is needed, (at the plant's roots) rather than sprayed
everywhere. While drip systems are simple and pretty forgiving of errors in
design and installation, there are some guidelines that if followed, will make
for a much better drip system. The purpose of this tutorial is to guide you
toward materials and methods that will increase the benefits of your new drip
system, while steering you away from some common misconceptions and practices
that can cause you trouble.
What's
with the Metric measurements?
Metric is
really the "native" measurements of drip irrigation.
This tutorial is setup in a multilevel format. Each of
the guidelines below describes a basic rule for drip irrigation design, with
the guidelines in the logical order for creating a design. You can think of the
guidelines as design steps if it helps. This page is the top level,
here you will find a brief description of each design guideline. So you choose
how much you want (or need) to learn.
Pressure
Regulator-
Most drip
systems will need a pressure regulator. You need one if your water pressure is
over 2,8 bars (40 PSI). The regulator can go before or
after the valve. Traditionally it is installed after the valve.
Filter-
You must
use a filter. Drip emitters have very small openings that are easily clogged.
City water is not free from stuff that will clog your emitters! Use a 150 mesh
screen or one with a higher mesh number like 200 mesh.
The filter may be installed before the valve or pressure regulator, but the
inexpensive plastic filters often sold for drip systems should be installed
after the pressure regulator. Most valve failures result from sand or rust
particles clogging of the tiny passages inside the valve! Use a filter that is
the same size as, or larger than, the valve.
Mainline-
The mainline
is the pipe that goes from the water source to the valves. In the illustration
of a very simple drip system above the gray colored vertical pipe under the
valve is a mainline. The mainline may be made of galvanized steel, copper, SCH
40 PVC, SCH 80 PVC, Cl 315
PVC, Heavy Wall Polyethylene (SDR 7 or SDR 9). Do not use polyethylene for the
mainline unless approved by your local building officials. Polyethylene has a
low burst pressure and should only be used for mainlines where local conditions
are appropriate.
Sub-Main-
The
sub-main is the pipe that goes from the valves to the connection point of the
drip tube. Many small drip systems do not have a sub-main, in those systems the
drip tube connects directly to the valve The
illustration of a very simple drip system above shows a system without a
sub-main. Sub-mains are usually Cl 200 PVC pipe or
standard weight polyethylene (poly) pipe. You use a sub-main when multiple drip
tubes are needed
Drip
Tubing-
Drip tubing
is a thin wall polyethylene tube, and is generally produced in metric sizes.
Common sizes are 12 mm (0.455" or 3/8"), 16mm (0.620" or
1/2"), 18mm (0.720" or 1/2"), and 24mm (0.940" or
3/4"). Do you see the problem? Two sizes are commonly referred to as
"1/2 inch" in the USA! The fittings for these two are not
interchangeable. So make sure you know what you're getting when you buy it! Do
not bury drip tubing underground- gophers and moles love to chew buried tubing!
Adapters
and fittings-
Used to attach the drip tube to the other parts. Important- make sure the fittings are the exact right
size! Using fittings made for a different tubing size will result in the tube
blowing out of the fitting. 9 times out of 10, when a tube blows out of a
fitting it is because the fitting is the wrong size .2 emitters per plant,
minimum. Trees and large shrubs may need more. Obviously, using two allows for
a backup if one clogs up (which happens now and then, even on the best designed
and maintained drip systems.) But just as important, more emitters also wet
more soil area. This results in more roots, and a healthier, happier plant.
Exception: if the plants are very close together you may need to use less than
2 per plant in order to maintain the minimum spacing between emitters. Minimum spacing for emitters: Install emitters at least 45cm (18") apart. Rule of thumb- install emitters 45 cm (18") apart
under 80% of the leaf canopy of the plant. That's where the roots are, and the
roots need water.
What valve size to
use?
Use a 20mm
(3/4") valve for most systems.
How many emitters per
valve?
Use the
charts below to determine how many emitters to install on each valve circuit.
|
Emitter volume used |
Any water supply that comes out of a building, such as a hose bib.
Any system with a pump*. |
20mm (3/4") Valve w/ 20mm (3/4") water supply. |
25mm (1") water supply. Use a 20mm (3/4") valve. |
|
2,0 l/hr (0.6 gph) |
300 |
300 |
700 |
|
4,0 l/hr (1 gph) |
180 |
180 |
420 |
|
* Pumps can be tricky. This is a conservative figure in order to make
it work with the majority of pump fed systems. You may be able to use a
larger number of emitters by calculating the actual output of your pump. See
the Irrigation Pumping Systems tutorial. Water supplies coming
out of a building are also a problem. The piping in buildings is almost never
designed to carry large amounts of water such as is used by irrigation
systems. To be safe I assume you have significant restrictions. 95% of
buildings have these restrictions so don't increase the flow unless you
really know what you're doing. Increasing the flow could cause extreme damage
to the plumbing in the building! |
|||
PVC
Mainlines & Sub-Mains.
Use 25mm (1") pipe for mains and
sub-mains. The total length of the mainline and the sub-main together should
not be more than 120 meters (400 feet). So you could have 100 meters of
mainline and 20 meters of sub-main, for a total of 120 meters of both. But you
could not have 80 meters of mainline and 60 meters of sub-main because the
total of both would be more than 120 meters. Many drip systems won't need
mainlines or sub-mains. Or they may need just a mainline, or just a sub-main.
Maximum tube length.
The length of drip hose may not exceed
60 meters (200') from the point the water enters the tube to the end of the
tube. Thus you could have 120 meters (400') of tube if the water entered the
tube in the middle (that would be 60 meters from the point the water enters the
tube to the end of the tube in each direction, which would be OK). You can extend
one tube off of another as long as the total length of the tubes that are
connected is not more than 60 meters (200').
Buried
Emitters
Never bury emitters underground unless
they are made to be buried. Even if they say they can be buried it is not recommended.
It causes too many maintenance problems.
Buried Tube.
If you bury drip hose don't complain
if gophers chew it up. One day it works, the next, it's
garbage. It only takes one gopher (or mole, squirrel, etc.), Other
wildlife (and most dogs), will also chew the tubes. It helps if you provide a
water source for them to drink from if possible. A water bowl with an emitter
to keep it full sometimes will distract wildlife from the tubes. You may need
to train your dog not to chew the tubes, dogs seem to chew
on the tubes for no real reason other than to annoy you. If you want to hide
the tube, dig a shallow trench for it, so that it is just below the level of
the surrounding soil. Don't put dirt over the tube. Throw some mulch or bark
over the top to hide the tube, or plant a low spreading plant that will grow
over it and hide it.
Feeder
Tubes, Spaghetti, and Distribution Tubing
Feeder Tubes, Spaghetti, and
Distribution Tubing are all names used for small diameter tubes, that is,
anything less than 10mm (3/8") in diameter. The problem is with
maintenance. These small tubes tend to be easily cut, broken, pulled loose,
etc. and are generally a nuisance. This is the type of tubing that is connected
to the outlets of multiple-outlet emitters. This tubing is the reason I do not
recommend the use of multiple outlet emitters. If you are a meticulous type
person who can be very careful, and you don't have pets or kids in the yard,
you may not have any problems. But for most
of us, regret soon sets in as repairing these small
tubes becomes a weekly maintenance chore. There are a couple of exceptions
where the tubes work well. One is when they are stapled above ground to a
trellis or arbor for watering hanging plants. They need to be firmly attached,
in a location where they will not be damaged. The other exception is a special
thick-walled distribution tube which is used for emitter "risers".
This tube is sold in short, straight lengths, it does
not coil easily as the thick wall makes it very rigid. If it's sold in a coil,
chances are it's not the right product. A buried PVC pipe (called a
"lateral") is installed between each plant in the landscape. The
thick-walled tube is then installed from a PVC fitting almost directly under
the plant. The tube goes straight up to an emitter, which is in
stalled at ground level. Few plants are used with this type
of installation, and they are spaced very far apart. Because most of the piping
is PVC, it can be pretty expensive.
Fittings- Correct size.
There are many different sizes of drip
tubing sold, and the fittings have to be made for the exact size tube you are
using! If they aren't, they will either be very hard to install, or the tube
will blow off the fitting. Sometimes it takes a week or so for the tube to come
loose, but if the fitting is even 1mm too large, the tubing will come off
eventually.
There are two types of fittings used.
The first and most commonly used is the
"compression" type. On this type the tubing shoves inside
the fitting. Compression type fittings tend to be harder to install, but they
also tend to hold up longer. The second type is "barbed"
fittings. With barbed fittings you shove the tubing over a barb on the
fitting. The problem with this is that it stretches the thin wall drip tubing
as it goes over the barb. This weakens the tube, and over time it splits and
comes off. It usually takes a few years for this to happen. If barbs are a
problem then why do they use barbed fittings with standard polyethylene pipe?
Standard poly pipe has a much thicker wall than drip tube and doesn't stress as
much when stretched. You also clamp standard poly pipe to the fittings,
which helps keep the pipe from splitting (that's why you need to clamp poly
pipe even if it seems to stay in place without the clamps). Drip tubing is not
clamped to the fittings (clamping doesn't help prevent splitting because of the
thin drip tubing wall).
•
Using
compression type fittings is recommended unless the tubing manufacturer
recommends otherwise
•
Lubrication:
Some people just don't have the strength to shove the tubing into a compression
fitting. First make sure the fitting is the right size, as that is very often
the problem. If it is, then you can use a water soluble lubricant on the tube.
Do not use oil, silicon sprays (WD-40) or soap! Absolutely do not heat the tube
with a flame, heat blower, or hot water as that will stretch the tubing and
create weak spots! What's a water soluble lubricant? Try K-Y Jelly. Attention! Avoid terminal embarrassment! Do not head for the
hardware store for K-Y Jelly. Try the drug store.
Stake down
the Tubes!
Stake the
drip tubes to the ground once every meter (about 3 feet). This keeps the tubes
from wandering. They tend to move around by themselves! Staking them also helps
protect them from damage. Using metal stakes as the plastic ones is preferred.
Wire that rusts holds even better, as the rust binds the wire to the soil.
After a few days they can be almost impossible to remove. They will rust away
in a few years, but by then the tubing has adapted to it's
position and stays in place pretty well. Standard 12 gauge wire works well, as
does pieces of wire coat-hangers. Buy some coat-hangers at a yard sale or
thrift store and help recycle! Bend a 300mm (12 inch) length of wire into a
"U" shape to make a tubing
"staple".