gearhead1960
ALLIANCE MEMBER
....keep the women and children away as they might have their hearing and sensibilities disturbed....
Yep, he's got those in the kit. I'm fully prepared for the original pins to be rusted solid and for the u-bolts to need cutting.New U-bolts and new spring retention pins on hand? I'll be by for a few to see how it went, or join in on the fun.
JB
Probably time ahead if you just cut the U bolts to begin with, maybe have the C clamps already on the leaf pack in case the pin gives while cutting them out, may be more excitement than you bargained for.Yep, he's got those in the kit. I'm fully prepared for the original pins to be rusted solid and for the u-bolts to need cutting.
I ain't messing around with this sum'*****.












I'm starting to wonder if it's a solenoid problem. Rebuilding all the valves would point that direction as the next set of parts to throw at it. But you make a good point, I can check the lines for continuity and see if there's a short. I would have thought unplugging the controller would rule that out though? No power going to the solenoids = no solenoids opening. In theory.I was going to suggest maybe one of the modules went bad at the control box, but it sounds like you tried swapping them around without success. When I had a zone that would run when any other zone was on, a new module fixed it.
Sounds to me like your control wires are shorting to one another. Maybe your control wire was nicked somewhere and the wires are touching? If you have a wire trace tool, you might be able to confirm. If not, you could disconnect the wires at the control box and check for continuity between each of them. If you get continuity, you'll know they are touching somewhere.
It does seem the simpler you can make your system, the better. I'm just working off what was left to me, which seems to be a decent system when it's all working. I don't think it's an old system either. I'm okay handing it off to a pro at this point too because the PITA factor is so high that it's just not worth my time and frustration.Tom, I feel your pain. My next door neighbor had a Rain Bird controller on his system and I tried to diagnose/fix a problem with his. I had to give up in frustration. I installed the same (scaled down to 1-inch) system as I have on our house.
I have had reasonably good luck with a rather crude electro-mechanical sprinkler system in both our first Florida home and our current one. The system was all 1.25" piping but I ended up putting 1.5" valves when it was what Home Depot had in stock. The controller is a 120/24v Intermatic 14-day timer that is installed inside the garage.
The outside stuff includes a K-Rain 24v solenoid valve , a vacuum break valve and a 6-zone Fimco indexing valve.
I have had issues with the system but it's dumb enough for me to figure out.
Randy, thanks for chiming in!Man that ***** about your sprinkler woes. I have been blowing out and winterizing mine since I finally got a compressor that I can use and dreaded handed over dinero to the local "guy". Seeing what he did and what he was getting paid was just too much.
This was the first year that I had any real problems. I always removed the backflow valve after blowing things out and then capped stuff off.
This year, of my 6 zones, 1 zone was "on" all of the time when the system was running. I got to the zone box and saw there was a ton of water in the box. Hmm...the google machine pointed me to junk in the valve and that's luckily where my woes ended. Once I popped the valve open and cleaned **** off, everything has been running fine since.
It is so, so just aggravating when you think you are on the path to a solution and what you are doing just doesn't get you to the finish line. Good luck!
Randy
Honestly, this was going to be my suggestion. We don't have pine trees on my place, but if you plant fescue up to a clean edge and transition to pine needles, I think it looks really good.I keep my pine needles under my pine tree.
Well ****. I hadn't considered lights on it.Tree ring and fill it with lawn gnomes
I've been considering building a custom ******** set also. My nephew has one a friend built for him with the lighted holes, pretty cool.
I keep my pine needles under my pine tree.
Ha, you guys make a good point. I'm coming to one of three ideas though:Honestly, this was going to be my suggestion. We don't have pine trees on my place, but if you plant fescue up to a clean edge and transition to pine needles, I think it looks really good.












Thanks XJ.Keep your socks dry Tom, good luck out there. Hopefully you can help those who need it this weekend and stay safe yourself along the way.
As for your pine problem.........all of those options look great, but what happens to the constant onslaught of pine debris? Are you planning on a new leaf blower purchase and 10min set aside each day to blow off a deck, keep the river rock clean, or separate pine from mulch or gravel or whatever? The neighbor's rock is nice but the needles mixed in everywhere just ruins it for me personally.
Thanks Marc.Pretty crazy stuff, and be been following it in the news.
Glad you got the sprinklers fixed even if they aren't to be used.
I'm with XJ, no matter what you'll be removing pine needles. Not sure which would be the lesser of the evils?
Stay safe and hope everything gets remedied with your water plant in short order!
DRINK HOLDERS! Genius!Glad to hear you're fairly safe from flooding so far... well minus the water plant shutting down! That road at Mammoth in the canyon was my parents favorite part of the park to visit and are very disappointed its likely gone forever...I haven't been to Yellowstone yet but it's on the list!
I happen to have a sprinkler appt tomorrow for an estimate on the required mods due to the fence... hopefully it's not too painful! I've been prepped for about $100 an hour.... but need to get it done as the fence gets stained next month.
And yes to ******** boards... don't forget drink holders in them!
Hadn't thought about a light kit....****....
Thanks Mark. Things are calming down out here now.Tom,
Glad to hear you're not biblically affected by the floods.
Pine needles are a pain in the A**. You don't want to plant anything under them that need water as the Pines will steal all of the available water under them. Deep roots from the pine trees drink much of the water, making other plants compete for root space and water. Pine trees' shadow also may make it difficult for many other plants to grow around the base of pine trees.
@loganb nice ******** sets!
Yeah, he was great. Awkward, but great.I'd keep that sprinkler guy's number handy...he sounds like a keeper. I have a similar guy that moonlights, but my repairs after my shop build were too much for him to take on.
Stay safe out there.
And yes to ******** boards... don't forget drink holders in them!
Yeah, it's been a crazy couple of days for sure. Now we've got blazing hot weather coming.Wow, that flooding is wild!
Nice work on the Nissan. You should definitely build some ******** boards.
Yeah, the destruction that flooding caused was absolutely nuts. Some of the areas I spend a lot of time in are now permanently changed or inaccessible. Going to be a weird summer.I was out last week and missed most of the info on the flooding but have heard more about it now that I'm back around civilization. I'm sorry to hear about all the damage, and to those effected by it. Crazy to think I was on a few of those road just over a month ago and they are now gone.
I'd probably go the mulch/plant idea with a boarder of some kind if you can keep the plants alive with your sprinkler system it should work great and no need to clean the needles out of them. I should have loaded up on river rock before coming home, I really like the look of it and we just don't have that here.
JB
I'm sure one could do that, but it's more of a pain than it's worth. Load it up, get it as close to the river as possible (made more difficult now by the flood cleanup) and then haul it the however-many yards to the river.I don't think my truck would have been too happy being loaded down with a full bed, but I'd have taken some for sure. I'll keep that in mind for my next trip. Can you just take the river rock back to the river or is that frowned upon?
JB
@loganb nice ******** sets!
Woah never seen the drink holders, great idea but to they get splashy when the bags hit?
No one is trying hard enough. Bonus points if the bag makes it in your opponents cup!Red solo cups haven't had any issues yet, I was worried that bags may slide off and dump into an open cup but haven't had that issue.

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Whoa.Hi Tom
I like the river rock garden bed idea, I'm actually leaning that way for my lawn too!
It seems its flooding everywhere at the moment. Its flooding down here too, which is nothing out of the ordinary. This week we have had 1 and a half months worth of rain in the last 5 days, and all the usual spots are flooding out.
Way out west on the edge of Sydney, Winsor, and surrounding suburbs of Riverstone and Schofields have always been lowlands that regularly flood. All the Run off from the Blue mountains feeds into the Nepean river from the southwest, and the Hawksbury river runs down from the north and it all ends in the Hawksbury- Nepean Basin... which is.... a flood plain (shocker I know)
Well they have developed the whole area.... and are starting to put residential suburbs there now, as there is just no where else to fit them in Sydney, despite the many protests from everyone in the local area.
Anyway..... this is the original bridge over the Nepean river, which flooded every year, its been there for 150 years:
Because they were so sick and tired of the Bridge flooding every year they decided to build a new bridge that was flood proof, costing $100 million dollars:
.
Here it is from the waterline, it sits nearly 10m high:
And here it is, a few months after its grand opening.... LOL
The New bridge is flood proof..... it sits 10m above the water line... once every 5 to 10 years the river peaks at 12 to 14 meters above the waterline......
The largest flood on record was the 1867 flood, a "one in 100 year flood" were the river peaked at 20m above normal height...
Residential development is planning to double the population in the area to 600,000 over the next decade.... If the river peaked at the 100 year record level, a area of 175 square miles would be underwater....
Go Sydney planning and development!
Just your average rainy day:
Rudi.









