Posts Tagged ‘grass care charlotte’

Pump Controls

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

When I was a child, my parents owned a one room fishing cabin on the banks of the Rogue River in the town of Shady Cove, Oregon. This was a pretty primitive place, and our source of water was a small 120 volt electric pump in the river. On the inlet side of the pump a 5′ long garden hose extended into the river, with a piece of window screen on the end to keep out most of the fish. The pump outlet was connected to a standard garden hose that ran up the bank from the pump to the cabin area. When we needed water we simply plugged in the extension cord that ran to the pump and moments later, after a few gurgles and burps, the water would start flowing from the hose. To turn the water off we simply unplugged the cord. This is an example of the most basic of pump control systems, and yet all pump controls are no more than a variation on this same procedure. The pump is started and stopped by turning on or off the power supply!

The next step up in pump control is to get rid of the plug and outlet and use a permanent switch to turn on and off the power flow. Some small pumps are stopped and started in exactly this way. But with the higher voltage and amperes commonly used for irrigation pumps a simple switch will not be practical. The switch would have to be huge to handle the load. Add to this the safety problems that develop when you add water to the equation. While 110 volts can kill you, contacting it with dry hands will likely only give you a bit of a “bite”. Grab that same voltage with wet hands and there is a good chance your heart will stop, or at the least you will wish you had stayed in bed that day! Water makes your skin a much better conductor of electricity. Remember that little childhood trick your friends pulled, involving the 9-volt battery and your tongue? If you press the battery terminals on your skin nothing much happens. But lick your skin before trying it (I don’t recommend sticking the battery terminals directly on your tongue!) and you will hear and possibly feel the spark jump! That’s what water does with 12 volts and a fraction of an amp. Believe me when I tell you that the 24 volts and 2.5 amps put out by most automatic irrigation controllers will make you say some pretty unnice things if you grab the wrong two wires with wet hands. Imagine, then, the effect if you increase the voltage to 240 volts and 15 amps! (By the way, it’s the amps that kill you, not the voltage!) For this reason most pump control circuits are designed using a relay circuit that isolates the user from the pump voltage. The relay circuit is like a messenger. You tell the relay to start the pump and the relay starts it for you. Most relays use 12 or 24 volts, a few use 120 volts. For example, the controls for spas usually use a 24 volt relay circuit because the manufacturers know you’re going to be turning them on and off with wet hands.

Source: http://www.irrigationtutorials.com

http://www.lawntechlandscaping.com

Pressure vs. Flow

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

The performance of a pump varies depending on how much water the pump is moving and the pressure it is creating. This is an important relationship not only because it determines whether the pump is suitable for your irrigation system, but also because it is these pump characteristics which allow you to control the operation of your pump. More on controls later. For now, the primary relationship to understand is that as the flow INCREASES, the pressure DECREASES. Here are the standard formulas used to estimate flow, pressure, and horsepower for all electric pumps. Note: these formulas have been simplified to assume a pump efficiency of 55% which is a good average figure to work with if you don’t know the exact efficiency of your pump. Pressure for pumps is always (in the U.S.A. that is!) measured in feet of head, one foot of head is equal to 0.433 pounds per square inch. The formula is:

FT.HD. = HP x 2178 / GPM

GPM = HP x 2178 / FT.HD.

HP = GPM x FT.HD. / 2178

HP is brake horsepower

GPM is gallons per minute of flow

FT.HD. is pressure in feet of head (PSI x 2.31 = FT.HD.)

Source: http://www.irrigationtutorials.com

http://www.lawntechlandscaping.com

Grass, Simplified: Hire Someone

Monday, October 5th, 2009

WARMER weather and longer days mean more time to spend out in the yard. But how do you want to spend that time: relaxing in a lawn chair, or walking behind a lawn mower?

“Both my wife and I work,” said David Lupberger, a home improvement consultant for servicemagic.com, a contractor referral company in Golden, Colo. “The last thing we want to be doing on the weekend is working in the yard.”

So the Lupbergers, like many homeowners, hire a landscape maintenance service to handle mowing, trimming and applying fertilizer and pesticides.

Homeowners can choose from among thousands of lawn maintenance services, from nationally franchised professional companies to enterprising students, according to Tom Delaney, director of government affairs for the Professional Landcare Network, a lawn and landscape industry group in Herndon, Va. Figuring out which tasks you want to handle and which you want to hand off is a first step.

The services available vary widely, from basic tasks like mowing and edging walkways and flower beds to more involved work like trimming shrubs and bushes, applying fertilizer and pesticides, and dethatching, which removes layers of dead grass. The cost will depend on the extent of the work and the size of the area to be maintained.

Tony Alicata, the owner of ITS Landscaping in Deer Park, N.Y., said he charges about $30 a week for basic services on a 1,000-square-foot lawn. Stephan Gow, owner of Scotland Yards Lawn Maintenance in Farmingville, N.Y., estimated that he would charge $45 for mowing 5,000 square feet.

Mr. Delaney said homeowners should make sure that a lawn company, like any other contractor, is licensed and insured.

Every state requires some form of licensing or certification for the application of pesticides, he said, and some towns and counties require licenses for smaller tasks like mowing and edging. In some states, licensed lawn companies are required to carry liability insurance to cover accidents or damage, Mr. Delaney said.

Licensing is especially important if the company applies pesticides, according to Margaret O’Neil, chief of pesticide reporting and certification for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. She said that such chemicals can be hazardous, particularly to children, because they can irritate the skin or cause respiratory problems if inhaled.

Requiring a license, she said, ensures that workers are trained to use pesticides properly. “Training doesn’t necessarily eliminate the risk, but it is the best mechanism to minimize it,” Ms. O’Neil said.

If you want to avoid pesticides, there are other choices, according to Frank Rossi, an associate professor of horticulture at Cornell University in Ithaca. Organic alternatives include milky spore bacteria for grub control, corn gluten meal to prevent crabgrass and oils and soaps for weed control. However, he said, they generally do not work as well as chemical pesticides and can cost considerably more.

A national lawn service company like Lawn Doctor won’t cut the grass but will handle other services. “We’re a traditional weed-and-feed company,” said John Buechner, director of technical services for Lawn Doctor. “Even homeowners who hire lawn maintenance companies to cut their lawns use us for fertilization and pest control.”

For about $300 a year, he said, his company offers about a half-dozen treatments to fertilize and control pests.

Even if you’re hiring a company for mowing alone, check the work. Mr. Gow and other professionals cautioned that mowing the grass at the wrong height can do more harm than good.

“You want to make sure that the company is cutting at 2 ½ to 3 inches,” Mr. Gow said, “because if you cut it too short, it causes stress on the grass and you won’t keep out the weeds.”

Source: www.nytimes.com

http://www.lawntechlandscaping.com