Controllers - LHAP 302

Printable reference generated from local presentation material.

PowerPoint Slides

Slide 1 visual
Slide 2 visual
Slide 3 visual
Slide 4 visual
Slide 5 visual
Slide 6 visual
Slide 7 visual
Slide 8 visual
Slide 9 visual
Slide 10 visual

Extracted Text and Images

1. Controllers

2. Controllers

the “brain” of the irrigation system activates the electric control valves telling them when to open or close different controllers are used in different locations depending on size and layout of the irrigation system depending on what type of programming is required

3. Controllers

Components include: cabinet indoor - transformer on end of plug outdoor - transformer in cabinet, lock on door, weatherproof

4. The Terminal Strip

may contain all or some of the following MV = master valve normally closed used to turn on a pump, for vandalism control, for flow sensors

VT = valve test always live used to test valves without wiring them up

5. Terminal Strip cont.

C or Com = common used for the common wire going to the valves

Numbers = field or station wires going to the valves each valve has its own terminal which determines when it will be activated.

SEN = sensor where the sensors are wired up. sensors may include flow sensor, rain sensor, rain-freeze sensor, soil moisture sensor, etc.

6. Wiring the valves

Wire copper wire underneath a PVC or HDPE jacket can be solid or stranded.Size of solid wire referred to as gauge. designated by AWG - American Wire Gauge number the larger the gauge #, the smaller the wire standard is white for common, colour for zone wiresstandard size for residential light commercial 12-18 gauge motocarr-tech

Course visual for Wiring the valves

7. Wire connection

weakest part of any wire is the splice or connection when connecting 2 solid wires remove insulating jacket - use wire strippers braid the wire together cover all the exposed wire with a waterproof connector

Course visual for Wire connection

8. Programming a Controller

residential light commercial run on stacked programming one zone at a time, one after the other

10:00 AM Program B 2:00 PM Zone 1 10 minutes 10:00 AM

0 minutes 2 :00 PM Zone 2 10 minutes 10:10 AM 15 minutes

2:00 PM Zone 3 10 minutes 10:20 AM 15 minutes 2:15 PM

Zone 4 10 minutes 10:30 AM 10 minutes 2:30 PM

9. Maintaining a Controller

At the beginning of the season

Make sure the wiring is tight change the battery plug in the controller and reset the date and time check each zone by running it manually for 2 minutes fix any heads, nozzles that are not operating correctly

Program the zones according to the scheduled run times.

10. Smart Controllers

will monitor growing conditions and automatically adjust the water application accordingly. use real time weather data (usually through a subscription service) or historical weather data are connected to weather stations that calculate evapotranspiration rates (ET) and/ or soil moisture sensors (SMS)