Create The Irrigation Repair List As You End The Season

Sep 27, 2017
By Lyndon Kelley
 
Before you put your irrigation system away for the season, create a list of needed repairs and potential improvements.
 
A good, end-of-season list of needed irrigation maintenance and repairs can help irrigators prevent in-season system breakdowns and delays in watering during next summer. Michigan State University Extension advises creating a plan for tackling repairs, and ideally making the repairs, before winter sets in. Often, there are special fall pricing and incentives for parts, service and repair work that is booked during fall and winter months. Using a smart phone to take photos and jotting down notes can help create a detailed repair list and makes it easy to send to others.
 
Put the center pivot system in motion and listen
 
Listen to each center pivot tower drive system to detect a damaged gear box or worn bearings. Identify gear box leaks and note or mark with a crayon for later repair.
 
Check wheels and tires
 
Inspect wheels for loose lug bolts and tires for cracks and wear. If you add air to tires in the fall and they are not still full in the spring, they need to be replaced or at least patched.
 
Listen to your traveler
 
Drive system noise can help you identify needed off-season repairs. Take time to listen to the traveler drive system at the point of greatest stress—beginning of the run for hard hose traveler, or end of the run or pull for soft hose systems. Note squeals and knocks that can indicate bearing or equipment wear.
 
Inspect the distribution system
 
Turn the water on and walk the length of the system or coverage area and list all the needed repairs. Leaks, bad seals and worn out sprinklers can be marked with a crayon or photographed and will eliminate the need to run water as you make repairs over fall and winter. Watch big guns and endguns for a few cycles. Hesitations in advancing around the semi-circle or in reversing are indications of a needed tune-up or bearing and seal replacement.
 
Check out the pressure gauge
 
First, make sure your pressure gauge works. A good gauge should return to zero when system pressure is relieved and should show the fluctuation in system pressure as the endgun or addition sprinklers are turned on and off. Pressure gauges provide very important information on the performance of your system.
 
If you question the accuracy of your gauge, replace it with a good quality liquid filled one. Mounting gauges on an isolator or upright section of pipe 4 to 5 inches in length allows the gauge to read the compressed air in the pipe rather than being constantly exposed to water, thus reducing rust accumulation and fouling.
 
Note the end-of-season operating pressure
 
With a good gauge, note the date and operating pressure. A log of operating pressures taken periodically throughout the season should highlight performance of the pump/screen and the static water level the pump pulls from. Expect that normal seasonal fluctuation will create a lower pressure reading in late summer/early fall than a spring reading when water levels are at seasonal highs.
 
Measure water flow
 
Many irrigators just have an educated guess at the flow their system puts out. A flow meter can give you a simple, quick look at your system’s output. Late summer/early fall is the low point in the annual cycle for surface water and ground water static water level. Compare the sprinkler package criteria to your measured flow and make adjustments as needed. Many dealers have the capacity to measure irrigation flow for their clients. Several well drillers and maintenance companies offer well testing programs. Be cautious of in-line impeller style flow meters. Most impeller style flow meters require annual calibration to be accurate—misinformation can be worse than a guess.
 
A good indication the water supply flow is not what the system was designed for is when the pressure at the pivot point is greater than 10 percent different than your sprinkler package specification when all of the sprinklers and the end gun on. If you utilize sprinkler pressure regulators, your pressure should be at least 5-10 pounds greater with the end gun on than the regulator operating pressure at the pivot point and just above the regulator operating pressure at the last sprinkler. See the explanation in the sprinkler chart design for details.
 
Compare actual application to the application chart
 
One of the surprising things we found doing uniformity can tests and flow testing is about two-thirds of systems evaluated applied less water than they were designed for. Accurate applications are dependent upon measurements of water flow to the distribution system and control of the pivot or traveler’s speed.
 
By timing a complete run of a circle and comparing to the system application chart, you can identify problems. The center pivot percent timer tends to be less accurate at low settings (below 10 percent). With larger systems being installed, and the switch to high-speed pivot drives, many irrigation applications are at these lower settings.
 
Check irrigation controls
 
Test the function of all the major control and interlock systems. Check center pivot end gun switches, stop-in slot or park, cornering arm valve controls and pump interlock systems.
 
Stop barricades
 
Pivots that make partial circles often use stop barricades at the edge of the water area. Check stops for integrity, making sure the height is still appropriate for the machine’s turnoff mechanism. Newer style stop barricades are designed to catch and spin the tire against the barricade, allowing the last tower safety timer to shut the pivot down as a backup safety system. Tire skid marks on the barricade indicates the primary stop switch has failed and needs replacing.
 
Make the most of irrigated fields yield maps
 
GPS yield mapping has tremendous potential for improving irrigation design, maintenance and management. If you had a period of drought this summer, the yield data and map will have even greater importance. Normal rainfall will mask many of the irrigation issues in most years.
 
Make a special effort to calibrate your yield sensor before harvesting irrigated fields and save the data back to a safe place before shutting the yield monitoring system down at the end of the day. Note areas in the field that have significant low or highs yields at harvesting and look for any obvious explanation while still in the field.
 
After harvest, find the GPS locations of center points of pivots, wheel paths or traveler lanes and double-watered areas. Most mapping programs will allow you to draw in the pivot point and pivot wheel rings allowing you to compare yield under each span.
 
If you do not enjoy the computer part of yield mapping, consider paying one of many services or consultants to help you. Finding irrigation equipment design or malfunctions can have a long-lasting benefit. A beginning step is to compare an aerial photo where you can identify the irrigation system with the yield map and see what jumps out at you.
 
Check your irrigated and non-irrigated yields
 
Now is the time to lay out the plan for future irrigation investments. Due to higher input costs, it is harder to survive a drought year without irrigation. Gather the data needed to decide where future irrigation investments are warranted.
 
Review the repair and needed improvement list and consider buying new
 
In most situations, the cost of needed repairs and improvements are small compared to the price of a new system. For systems covering large acreage or on crops of great importance, it may be better to replace them before a mid-summer catastrophe. Often, the old equipment is recycled into a few small field or dry corner machines if they still have useable life left.
 
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