Hire a company to do it. It's not worth all the time you'll have to spend digging trenches and running all the line, especially with 6000sq ft.
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that.
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that.
True, but it's better to be safe than sorrow. We sue people for quite some money when our cables get cut.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that.
True, but it's better to be safe than sorrow. We sue people for quite some money when our cables get cut.
:roll:
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that.
True, but it's better to be safe than sorrow. We sue people for quite some money when our cables get cut.
:roll:
Go cut an AT&T cable and see how many blocked calls you'll be paying for. Just call first.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that. I work on a golf course and two of the guys I used to work with had a business installing systems. I helped them out a few times.
1. Get someone else to do it. It's hard work.
2. The laying of the pipe/setting up of the heads is actually pretty easy.
3. You'll need your hookup to the water main inspected most likely. This is where a pro really helps out.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: KK
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that.
True, but it's better to be safe than sorrow. We sue people for quite some money when our cables get cut.
:roll:
Go cut an AT&T cable and see how many blocked calls you'll be paying for. Just call first.
AT&T does not run a cable 1 foot underneath the lawn in my front yard. I've installed more than a few of these systems. Yes you call, but that's when you're looking for the water main. The rest of it is all on your property.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that. I work on a golf course and two of the guys I used to work with had a business installing systems. I helped them out a few times.
1. Get someone else to do it. It's hard work.
2. The laying of the pipe/setting up of the heads is actually pretty easy.
3. You'll need your hookup to the water main inspected most likely. This is where a pro really helps out.
Originally posted by: JeffCos
Hire a company to do it. It's not worth all the time you'll have to spend digging trenches and running all the line, especially with 6000sq ft. But if you're really stubborn and have to do it yourself 1. You're a fool and 2. Here's the do-it-yourself guide
Originally posted by: nourdmrolNMT1
silverpig, your kidding yourself.
CAtv cables near the house are less than 2 ft in the ground.
ive cut mine like 4 times while edging our flowerbeds.
and yea rainbird is supposedly the best.
but i dont have much input.
MIKE
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: nourdmrolNMT1
silverpig, your kidding yourself.
CAtv cables near the house are less than 2 ft in the ground.
ive cut mine like 4 times while edging our flowerbeds.
and yea rainbird is supposedly the best.
but i dont have much input.
MIKE
Then whoever installed yours didn't do a good job. I've dug up many yards and have never hit anything. We got to the water main and it was at least 6 feet down. Gas and electrical were 2 and 4 feet below that usually. Maybe this is just where I am, but that's the norm around here. Furthermore, all of those lines are required to have warning tape a foot above the lines.
Also: We always used toro. Toro for home systems, toro for the big systems on the golf courses... Actually the last guy went with rainbird on a few newly renovated holes and that system, while better than the ancient toro system, isn't as good as the new toro system we just installed at the course I work at now.
Then whoever installed yours didn't do a good job. I've dug up many yards and have never hit anything.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: squirrel dog
Call your One Call center before you dig . Or you may cut your phone/catv/sewer/water/gas services.
Sprinkler systems for the home only go down maybe 1-2 feet. All that stuff is waaayyy below that. I work on a golf course and two of the guys I used to work with had a business installing systems. I helped them out a few times.
1. Get someone else to do it. It's hard work.
2. The laying of the pipe/setting up of the heads is actually pretty easy.
3. You'll need your hookup to the water main inspected most likely. This is where a pro really helps out.
Originally posted by: drnickriviera
It's not that bad. I have around 20,000 sq ft in my sprinkler system and did it by myself. I sent the plan into rainbird, but redisigned a bunch of the zones as they wasted a lot of pipe. I have a total of 12 zones with around 48-50 heads.
Considering you should get around 30' diameter on a head with 50% overlap, if my math is right that should be 350 sqft per head. 6000sqft, 17 heads. probably around 20-25 due to quarter and semi circles. That's not that bad.
I'm not sure if they have the same heads, but I originally bought my heads from home depot. Bought more from a landscape/nursery store. the ones from the landscaping company had what they called a rain curtain nozzle. The arc and spray of the rain curtain nozzles were much better than the ones from Depot
