I had to pause the vid to say “a wet/dry vac is handy in this situation. Suck the water away and even any debris that fell into the line. Or dig a bigger diameter hole” great info so far!
Woke up this morning to have a cup of coffee on my back deck and saw a hole filled with water in a dirt patch where I’ve been trying to reseed. Wondered what was up with that and discovered a buried sprinkler head. Quick Google search and I found this video. Now I know what I’ll be doing today and hopefully with a level sprinkler head can get some grass there this summer!
Perfect! Great close up shots, easy step by step instructions with pictures. So well spoken a senior can understand what the next step is, without having to rewind over and over! Thank you so much this was exactly the thing I'm trying to accomplish. Cross your fingers!
At 10:10 you could've just put the nozzle back on with the water running so we could have some fun, lol. You could've mentioned that the riser may need to be FPT to MPT (as in this case) or MPT to MPT, depending on the installation method used. The system I installed 30 years ago was using 3/4 inch PVC pipe with 3/4 x 3/4 x 1/2 FPT tees, so the risers threaded directly into FPT of the tees. I wasn't aware of installations utilizing swing pipe in the early 90's.
Thank you! I have a sprinkler head that is overgrown like this and just floods a area from underneath the ground. I guess I'll dig it up and do what you did.
Very good video. Only thing I would add is to wet the area around the head and let it sit a few minutes before unscrewimg the old head. Then sediment wont fall down in the hole and it will stay like a tube.
Nice! I’m helping a neighbor with their system that was installed many years ago and has been offline for the past few years (electrical issue). There’s one particular valve that when turned on, nothing happens. I figured a line blockage or buried heads. No maps or anything to aid in locating the sprinklers except the guess of where they believe the heads are.
I'd suggest checking that there is power to the valve with a multimeter. You can also try to manually override that valve. Start there and see if one of those is your issue. Good luck!
I showed 2 types of risers... The cutoff type might only be available at irrigation supply, but some big box home stores might have them too. Fixed size ones are common everywhere.
I have an old copper irrigation system. what's the best and easiest way to rise the heads to the current grass level? The current heads don't even seem to be solder on the pipe.
I tried to find a cut-off riser extension just like you showed in the video. I need 1/2" NPT, and the only size with a female on one end and male on the other is 2.5" long. They have a 4" with 3/4" NPT, but not with 1/2" NPT. I also could find gobs of different lengths with 1/2" NPT with male at both ends. It seems that most sprinkler bodies have a female end that screws into male swing joint elbow. So I would think that there would be TONS of different lengths of both 1/2" NPT and 3/4" NPT riser extensions with female and male ends. Am I missing something?
Well, duh. They’re linear & evenly spaced. How about locating one on a sprinkler system that was installed around very large existing trees & nonlinear. Then what?
Not likely because there's not enough water pressure, but you may get an underground puddle. Sometimes I've even seen sod bubbles! Normally it will cause an over saturated soft spot in that area of the lawn.
I have an old copper irrigation system. what's the best and easiest way to rise the heads to the current grass level? The current heads don't even seem to be solder on the pipe.
I had to pause the vid to say “a wet/dry vac is handy in this situation. Suck the water away and even any debris that fell into the line. Or dig a bigger diameter hole” great info so far!
Excellent! Of course NOW I want to check and clean every head and filter amd find my leaky culprits....
Woke up this morning to have a cup of coffee on my back deck and saw a hole filled with water in a dirt patch where I’ve been trying to reseed. Wondered what was up with that and discovered a buried sprinkler head. Quick Google search and I found this video. Now I know what I’ll be doing today and hopefully with a level sprinkler head can get some grass there this summer!
too busy looking at that beautiful neighborhood. Missed the whole training.. Kidding. Good stuff. Thank you
I have a bunch of those. Thank you for the clear instructions.
Legends tell of a sprinkler head in an area of my yard, but I haven't been able to find it.
You could teach just about anything - excellent turorial !
Perfect! Great close up shots, easy step by step instructions with pictures. So well spoken a senior can understand what the next step is, without having to rewind over and over! Thank you so much this was exactly the thing I'm trying to accomplish. Cross your fingers!
Good luck with your project. 👍
At 10:10 you could've just put the nozzle back on with the water running so we could have some fun, lol.
You could've mentioned that the riser may need to be FPT to MPT (as in this case) or MPT to MPT, depending on the installation method used. The system I installed 30 years ago was using 3/4 inch PVC pipe with 3/4 x 3/4 x 1/2 FPT tees, so the risers threaded directly into FPT of the tees. I wasn't aware of installations utilizing swing pipe in the early 90's.
Great video. Now I just need to go out and locate my buried valves. 🙂
Extremely well done! Very helpful. Thanks!
VERY nice, exquisitely clear video, thanks
Very well done and explained. Thank you!
You're very welcome!
Thank you! I have a sprinkler head that is overgrown like this and just floods a area from underneath the ground. I guess I'll dig it up and do what you did.
Thank you for sharing!!! It’s really helpful
Thanks for sharing your valuable knowledge!
Awesome video!! Huge help. Thank you!
Glad it helped!
Very good video. Only thing I would add is to wet the area around the head and let it sit a few minutes before unscrewimg the old head. Then sediment wont fall down in the hole and it will stay like a tube.
Good to mention that. 👍 I also wiggle the head around a bit and try to "pack" the sides of that area so dirt will not fall into the hole.
Execellent video!
Good stuff! Thank you!
Great info, thanks for sharing!
Hi, Outstanding video! What is the name of the tool to take out the nozzle? Best, Albert
Good tips. I have a huge dead area between me and my neighbor. I’m guessing I have a buried sprinkler head on my side. Hopefully its on my side
Just had to subscribe
Nice! I’m helping a neighbor with their system that was installed many years ago and has been offline for the past few years (electrical issue). There’s one particular valve that when turned on, nothing happens. I figured a line blockage or buried heads. No maps or anything to aid in locating the sprinklers except the guess of where they believe the heads are.
I'd suggest checking that there is power to the valve with a multimeter. You can also try to manually override that valve. Start there and see if one of those is your issue. Good luck!
@@ColumbusLandscapers thanks! They actually don’t have anything fancy. Just manual hand knob valves. I’m sure the heads are just too buried
I use me metal dector
What is the name of the hand tool that you are using?
Good info! What is the riser called? I haven’t found that type.
I showed 2 types of risers... The cutoff type might only be available at irrigation supply, but some big box home stores might have them too. Fixed size ones are common everywhere.
I have an old copper irrigation system. what's the best and easiest way to rise the heads to the current grass level? The current heads don't even seem to be solder on the pipe.
Man I'm old but maybe not that old .... Sorry I've never messed with one of those. 🤔
@@ColumbusLandscapers Is PVC sch. 40 or 80 need for systems in Michigan. Connecting it to copper lines that are already ran.
I tried to find a cut-off riser extension just like you showed in the video. I need 1/2" NPT, and the only size with a female on one end and male on the other is 2.5" long. They have a 4" with 3/4" NPT, but not with 1/2" NPT. I also could find gobs of different lengths with 1/2" NPT with male at both ends. It seems that most sprinkler bodies have a female end that screws into male swing joint elbow. So I would think that there would be TONS of different lengths of both 1/2" NPT and 3/4" NPT riser extensions with female and male ends. Am I missing something?
Irrigation supply for contractors
In have same problem. I do have concrete donuts n even have put 2 around it n still runs over it n breaks...
what brand is that?
Think it was rain bird.
Whats the name of the tool you use to grab the sprinkler head?
PTC1 Rain Bird Spray Head Pull-Up Tool
Dang.
Well, duh. They’re linear & evenly spaced. How about locating one on a sprinkler system that was installed around very large existing trees & nonlinear. Then what?
Tree root issues there.. your best bet there isn't to find the ones that you can and re-route the lines between them to newly installed heads.
I’ve hooked up a water hose and let it flow. Look for wet spots and plug them to pressurize the others. One by one.
Not duh
It helped many
Great video
Yea then what!!!
What if my sprinkler is under the soil and I turn my irrigation on, will my pvc pipe burst?
Not likely because there's not enough water pressure, but you may get an underground puddle. Sometimes I've even seen sod bubbles! Normally it will cause an over saturated soft spot in that area of the lawn.
@@ColumbusLandscapers that explains why my soil feels saturated and soft. Thanks for the video and the quick reply
Capit
I have an old copper irrigation system. what's the best and easiest way to rise the heads to the current grass level? The current heads don't even seem to be solder on the pipe.