Calsense ET1 Manual To Programming Download Page 9

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11. How to Calculate Station Flow Rates

There are two methods to determine station flow rates if a Calsense flow meter is not installed on the system. The following
describes each method.

Using Manufacturers Published Data:

With this method you use a manufacturers catalog which has the flow rates listed for the type heads, and nozzle sizes on the system
you are calculating. Simply total the flow rates for all the nozzles on the station.

Example:

A station has 8 half-circle pop-ups with a flow rate of 2 gpm each, 3 full-circle pop-ups at 4 gpm each and 4 quarter-circle pop-ups
at 1 gpm each. The station’s flow rate would be calculated as follows.

8 heads x 2 gpm =

16 gpm

3 heads x 4 gpm =

12 gpm

2 heads x 1 gpm =

2 gpm

Total flow =

30 gpm

Measuring Station Flow Rates:

The second method is a little more complicated, but the results are more accurate. You will use the irrigation system’s water meter
to calculate flow rates. Use the following procedure :

1. Determine the units used by the water meter (gallons, cubic feet, etc.). Make sure no other water will be flowing while you are

measuring flow rates. Also, if there is more that one water meter connected to the mainline, all of them must be turned-off except
the one you are using to measure flow with.

2. Before beginning, turn on each station to make sure there are no broken heads or pipe and no plugged heads. Breaks or

plugged heads will cause incorrect flow readings.

3. Begin by turning on a station, let it run long enough to purge all the air out of the system. Then simultaneously, make note of the

meter reading and start timing using a stopwatch. After 3 minutes has elapsed make note of the meter reading again. Subtract
the starting meter reading from the ending meter reading, this will give you the amount of water used by the station in 3 minutes.
Continue this procedure until all stations have been measured.

4. To calculate the flow rate, divide the amount of water the station used (measured in gallons) by 3 minutes, this will give you the

station’s flow rate measured in GPM’s (gallons per minute).

Example #1 (if water meter units are in gallons) :

The starting meter reading is 312,121. After 3 minutes the ending meter reading is 312,378 gallons, the flow rate would be calculated
as follows:

312,378 gallons - 312,121 gallons = 257 gallons

257 gallons ÷ 3 minutes = 85.6 gpm

station flow rate = 85.6 gpm

Example #2 (if water meter units are in cubic feet or CF) :

The starting meter reading is 9,975 CF After 3 minutes the ending meter reading is 10,003 CF, the flow rate would be calculated as
follows:

10,003 CF - 9,975 CF = 28 CF

28 CF x 7.48 gallons = 209.4 gallons

(1 CF = 7.48 gallons)

209.4 gallons ÷ 3 minutes = 69.8 gpm

station flow rate = 69.8 gpm

Example #3 (if water meter units are in hundreds of cubic feet or CCF) :

The starting meter reading is 12,321 CCF After 3 minutes the ending meter reading is 12,321.25 CCF, the flow rate would be
calculated as follows:

12,321.25 CCF - 12,321 CCF = .25 CCF

.25 CCF x 748 gallons = 187 gallons

(1 CCF = 748 gallons)

187 gallons ÷ 3 minutes = 62.3 gpm

station flow rate = 62.3 gpm

NOTE : In examples #2 and #3 above, there is one extra step in the calculation, this is to convert the cubic feet into gallons before

dividing by 3 minutes.

Summary of Contents for ET1

Page 1: ...ogal Suite P Carlsbad CA 92011 760 438 0525 Fax 760 438 2619 www calsense com Real Time ET Based Water Management A Guide to Programming the ET1 Irrigation Controller for use in Daily ET Mode Stock No...

Page 2: ...es whenever scheduled irrigation is set to occur Since ET is determined by weather conditions irrigation run times change daily based on current weather conditions This helps conserve water and create...

Page 3: ...w it got into the ET table h historical g ET Gage and e edited The upper left hand value is today s ET it will remain a historical number until 8 00 PM each night at which time the controller will pla...

Page 4: ...of ET In this situation each Monday would have station run times much longer than any other day of the week which could cause over watering problems With ET averaging ON the extended run times on Mon...

Page 5: ...o rain bucket installed and you are not sharing rain data using the Calsense Command Center program these settings will have no effect on daily ET Daily ET cont d RAIN BUCKET Stop Irrigation after inc...

Page 6: ...ce data to drive the program In either case you would want to use the historical ET for the area you are located in The ET1 controller stores historical ET information for 21 counties in California an...

Page 7: ...ts to this setting you will see the Estimated Minutes change Try to make small adjustments 5 to 10 at a time and allow a few days to pass before re adjusting if necessary Daily ET only replaces the mo...

Page 8: ...e 4 View the amount of each station s hold over time with the option of clearing a station s hold over time Negative hold over time hold over time generated by a rain bucket will be shown as a negativ...

Page 9: ...out of the system Then simultaneously make note of the meter reading and start timing using a stopwatch After 3 minutes has elapsed make note of the meter reading again Subtract the starting meter rea...

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