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Old 27-07-2011, 04:21 PM posted to rec.gardens
Brooklyn1 Brooklyn1 is offline
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Default Sprinkler question

On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 07:03:51 -0700, "Bob F"
wrote:

Brooklyn1 wrote:
On Tue, 26 Jul 2011 08:58:21 -0700, "Bob F"
wrote:

Brooklyn1 wrote:
David E. Ross wrote:

My neighborhood is on a water system that is gravity-fed from a
1,000,000 gallon tank up on a hill higher than any house.

That's typical.

The pressure in my lines is high enough that a hose turned on full
will writhe and snap like an injured snake.

Is "injured snake" some new water company standard?

Your water company like every other US water company is delivering
residential properties no more than about 40 psi, with volume
limited by meter diameter. Most folks on private wells will have
much greater pressure and volume than what a municipal water
company supplies residential customers... you'd be doing good if
your tap can produce four gallons a minute. With most
neighborhoods on a municipal water system it's suggested to run
automatic sprinkler systems during the wee morning hours before
people awaken for the day, and then to have no more than 4-5
sprinkler heads per zone.

Seattle city water pressure at my house is 70 psi, certainly well
above "no more than about 40 psi".


How do you know that you have 70 psi water pressure inside your home,
people on city water don't have a pressure tank. Most residenses
(especially older homes) would spring leaks at 70 psi... clothes/dish
washer fill hoses, ice makers, toilets and such especially... of
course you can post the Seattle water URL that shows their residential
pressure. Municipal water companys typically supply about 50 psi to
residential street mains but the residential meter reduces pressure to
about 40 psi, which is more than enough pressure for the average home.
Municipal water companys don't supply higher pressure than is
adequate, they are averse to destroying peoples homes.


Unlike you, I actually know, rather than making unbased claims. I put a guage on
a faucet - it read 70 psi.


You're full of poo.

It's nonsense that older homes would spring leaks at 70 psi. Older homes all
over Seattle deal with it fine. 70 psi is well within the design limits of
plumbing pipes. Sure, all plumbing eventually has to be replaced, but higher
pressure may delay that, as it allows sufficient water to get through internally
corroded, constricted pipes.


I take it you won't post an URL that indicates your water company's
residential water pressure.