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Old 26-04-2004, 06:02 PM
bill
 
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Default porous hose

Can someone please tell me the proper water pressure for using the
"leaky hose" made from old tires.

Thanks in advance.
Bill


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Old 26-04-2004, 09:02 PM
dps
 
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Default porous hose

bill wrote:
Can someone please tell me the proper water pressure for using the
"leaky hose" made from old tires.

Thanks in advance.
Bill




I believe they're designed for full household water pressure, which
probably is in the range 30-60 psi.

If you leave them out in the garden continuously, they do get holes
(larger than designed), probably caused by insects or rodents. You can
cut out the bad spot and splice them with regular hose splices,
available at your hardware store (around $1 apiece). At some point it's
probably cheaper to buy a new one (and re-use the splices on another hose).
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Old 27-04-2004, 01:02 AM
 
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Default porous hose

you know, it depends on what else is running in teh house our outside. I turn mine
down until it is leaking but not spritzing water into the air. then I have a melnor
delivers X gallons and I just set that rather than fooling with the water knob all
the time. Ingrid

"bill" wrote:

Can someone please tell me the proper water pressure for using the
"leaky hose" made from old tires.

Thanks in advance.
Bill




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Old 27-04-2004, 04:03 AM
Pam - gardengal
 
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Default porous hose


"dps" wrote in message
...
bill wrote:
Can someone please tell me the proper water pressure for using the
"leaky hose" made from old tires.

Thanks in advance.
Bill




I believe they're designed for full household water pressure, which
probably is in the range 30-60 psi.

If you leave them out in the garden continuously, they do get holes
(larger than designed), probably caused by insects or rodents. You can
cut out the bad spot and splice them with regular hose splices,
available at your hardware store (around $1 apiece). At some point it's
probably cheaper to buy a new one (and re-use the splices on another

hose).

The maximum water pressure for use with a soaker hose is 30 psi. Ideally,
you want the hose to only sweat, with water just oozing out of the pores -
no spray. Too high a water pressure is most likely the cause of holes,
although I wouldn't necessarily rule out creatures entirely. At any rate,
the intention of these devices is to deliver water at a very slow rate over
an extended period of time so that the water is able to percolate well down
into the root zone. I don't believe I have particularly high water pressure,
but I run my soakers with only a quarter turn or so of the faucet -
certainly not anywhere close to full volume. To determine how long these
types of hoses should be run, test the soil in 20 minute increments. When
the water has penetrated to a depth of 6-8 inches, you have accomplished
your goal. This could be anywhere from 45 minutes to several hours,
depending on the soil type.

pam - gardengal


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Old 27-04-2004, 05:03 PM
Richard Cline
 
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Default porous hose


I use my porous hose at full pressure. It sprays in many places butt
that does not bother me. It waters the ground. I have been using the
same hose for several years without problem. I find it a very effective
way to water much of the yard. I do use one of the longer length hoses
so there is add surface area.

Dick


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Old 27-04-2004, 07:03 PM
bill
 
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Default porous hose

Thanks for the info.

Could have sworn I read a couple of years ago that 2psi was about
right to make the hose sweat instead of spray. I hooked a fairly short
length up to my rain barrel (4 ft drop, around 2psi) but didn't get
very much water at all. Guess I'll have to borrow or buy a pressure
guage and measure the pressure from the garden hose that gives me the
right output.


"Richard Cline" wrote in message
...

I use my porous hose at full pressure. It sprays in many places

butt
that does not bother me. It waters the ground. I have been using

the
same hose for several years without problem. I find it a very

effective
way to water much of the yard. I do use one of the longer length

hoses
so there is add surface area.

Dick



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