January-February 2009

SWAT Away Wasted Water

Traditional ways of irrigating crops are changing under the pressure of water scarcity as new technologies emerge.

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Photo: PureSense Pure Sense monitoring station powered by solar panel and battery backup

By Lyn Corum

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The moisture sensor measures the absolute water content of the soil under all conditions of temperature and soil chemistry, and communicates with and receives electrical power from the controller. Acclima’s proprietary system allows multiple sensors and other devices to receive power and maintain communications over just two wires. 

The moisture sensor is buried about 2–3 inches in the soil and wired to the valve box on the irrigation system. The cable containing the wire is buried 8 inches deep in the soil. The customer then has complete control over operation of the irrigating system and can modify its operating hours.

Acclima also sells five models of closed-loop irrigation control systems, each paired with its sensor. They are capable of covering six to 12, 24 to 36, or 64 zones depending on the model and are designed to allow for one sensor per uniform zone. 

Acclima’s suspended time controllers allow timers to be set up based on the amount of precipitation needed. The timer has set start times and durations, but the system will be inhibited if there is sufficient moisture in the soil. For example, the SCX suspended cycle add-on device can be used on any 24-V timer. It can interrupt conventional timers, and do auto setup and performance reporting.

Alternately, with water-on-demand irrigation, the controller requires no schedule programming and turns water on only when the soil moisture level falls below a set threshold. The high-end commercial controllers are also capable of controlling watering within restrictions set by local governments.

For new systems, a single wire pair or multiple wire pairs can be used to mark the limits of the property and interconnect all sensors, valves, flow meters, and such attached to that two-wire network. It conveys 24-V power to the valves and other devices on the system, and it conveys signals to maintain communications with the same devices.

Acclima also offers irrigation manager software. It allows multiple controls and monitoring of irrigation controllers from a central location. Maps of sites can be imported, and the irrigation system can be viewed including zones. Reports and sensor graphs are also available.

Saving Water While Improving Plant Growth
Kingsley Horton, western states sales manager for Acclima, describes a study done at a Florida housing development that had been warned by local authorities about exceeding permitted water limits. The authorities threatened to shut down the development. Two different contractors installed Acclima systems, and water usage was tracked. The Acclima system reduced water usage 62%, compared to areas where irrigation timers were used with no Acclima systems.

At the Idaho State Capital, Horton says the company installed one controller with three sensors, at a cost of $2,400. That controller saved enough water to pay back the cost in 3.8 months, despite a leak caused by a broken pipe behind the water meter causing runoff into the street all night. Apparently, the managers had opted to not install flow meters that would have shut the water off. Horton says they have changed their minds about the advantage of a flow meter, since it could have saved even more water.    

Roger Water, a landscape architect specializing in water and soil management, installs Acclima smart controllers regularly. He originally installed controllers that use weather data and ran into various kinds of problems. The radio that needed a signal sent to it would lose the signal, antennas and radios broke, and wire contacts went bad on solenoids.

“I need to have customers not be aware of the irrigation system,” he says.

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And when things break, the customer becomes aware. In a number of gardens and landscaped residential estates, he replaced those systems with Acclima’s probes and controllers, and got much fewer callbacks.

However, Water says he would install the weather-based wireless WeatherTRAK system in areas where there is too much hardscape to run the wires needed for the Acclima system. Next Page >

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