Addiction LXXVIII
#5452
Senior Member
I'm past due in my Jeep to change the transmission and T-case fluids, and to rotate the tires. I've also put off dealing with my oil pressure sensor that needs to be replaced because FCA, in their infinite wisdom, now requires half of the engine to be taken apart to change it- and that's only a slight exaggeration. But it's a Jeep- it's supposed to have that check engine light on, right?
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#5453
cowboy, steel horse, etc
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: The hot spot.
Posts: 45,369
Bikes: everywhere
Liked 8,037 Times
in
4,273 Posts
I've had the most ridiculous time setting up zone 2 irrigation for the northwest lawn. I'm changing it from 4 sprayers to 2 rotors, so I ran some new pipe out to the corner of the lawn, plug all the Tees for the olde sprayers and flush the pipe for 20 secs. Then put the swing joint and rotor on the end, open the valve and there's not enough pressure to pop the rotor up. Urrggghh.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
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#5454
VFL For Life
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Knoxville, TN
Posts: 51,727
Bikes: Velo Volmobile
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#5455
cowboy, steel horse, etc
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: The hot spot.
Posts: 45,369
Bikes: everywhere
Liked 8,037 Times
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4,273 Posts
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#5456
Super Modest
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 23,589
Bikes: Trek Emonda, Giant Propel, Colnago V3, Co-Motion Supremo, ICE VTX WC
Liked 4,802 Times
in
2,189 Posts
I think that I told this before but I’m old and forgetful so here goes:
My wife still worked for a couple years when I retired and she would ask me every night when she got home what had I done all day so I started making a list to prove I wasn’t a slacker.
1. Did some grocery shopping (rode bike to the convenience store and got a cup of coffee)
2. Did some yard work (picked up a piece of trash or a stick in the yard)
3. Did some banking (hit the ATM at the convenience store while buying a cup of coffee)
etcetera, you get the idea.
My wife still worked for a couple years when I retired and she would ask me every night when she got home what had I done all day so I started making a list to prove I wasn’t a slacker.
1. Did some grocery shopping (rode bike to the convenience store and got a cup of coffee)
2. Did some yard work (picked up a piece of trash or a stick in the yard)
3. Did some banking (hit the ATM at the convenience store while buying a cup of coffee)
etcetera, you get the idea.
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#5457
Super Modest
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 23,589
Bikes: Trek Emonda, Giant Propel, Colnago V3, Co-Motion Supremo, ICE VTX WC
Liked 4,802 Times
in
2,189 Posts
I've had the most ridiculous time setting up zone 2 irrigation for the northwest lawn. I'm changing it from 4 sprayers to 2 rotors, so I ran some new pipe out to the corner of the lawn, plug all the Tees for the olde sprayers and flush the pipe for 20 secs. Then put the swing joint and rotor on the end, open the valve and there's not enough pressure to pop the rotor up. Urrggghh.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
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Keep the chain tight!
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#5458
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Greenville SC
Posts: 4,189
Bikes: 1975 Motobecane Grand Jubile, 2020 Holdsworth Competition, 2022 Giant Trance 29 3
Liked 3,784 Times
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1,278 Posts
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#5459
So it is
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Westminster, CO
Posts: 21,510
Bikes: Luzerne, 684, Boreas, Wheelhouse, Alize©®, Bayamo, Cayo
Liked 4,926 Times
in
2,846 Posts
I've had the most ridiculous time setting up zone 2 irrigation for the northwest lawn. I'm changing it from 4 sprayers to 2 rotors, so I ran some new pipe out to the corner of the lawn, plug all the Tees for the olde sprayers and flush the pipe for 20 secs. Then put the swing joint and rotor on the end, open the valve and there's not enough pressure to pop the rotor up. Urrggghh.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
So I put a cap on the swing joint, remove a plug from an olde tee, open the valve and I got Old Faithful pressure. So I uncap the swing joint, open the valve and dribbles.
For the run to the corner, I tapped into an olde tee that was 1/2" thread, so it choked down to 1/2 through the tee and couple inches more for a connector and a street elbow that put it back to 3/4 pipe that was about 6' long and rose about 2".
Maybe the necking down to 1/2" and then opening up to an uphill 3/4" run is impacting pressure that much? Seems unlikely, and I was really close to sitting down and working out the fluid dynamics of such a situation, bit then I decided screw it, gonna cut that 1/2" crap out of the equation. Dug up the tee, cut it off, made the whole run to the corner 3/4".
Turned on the valve, and it's dribbling out the swing joint.
I finally got the idea to pull the swing joint and check pressure. Full blown geyser!
Turns out there was a damn pebble in the run that wouldn't pass through the swing joint, but didn't get flushed out upon the earlier flushing.
What a day.
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#5460
So it is
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Westminster, CO
Posts: 21,510
Bikes: Luzerne, 684, Boreas, Wheelhouse, Alize©®, Bayamo, Cayo
Liked 4,926 Times
in
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The person that owned this house prior to us did that gravel thing. It's forever, unless you pull a front loader in and dig down a foot or two. We fight it constantly, and it sucks.
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#5461
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Greenville SC
Posts: 4,189
Bikes: 1975 Motobecane Grand Jubile, 2020 Holdsworth Competition, 2022 Giant Trance 29 3
Liked 3,784 Times
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I figured it wouldn't be worth it just to save some time and effort on yard work. I don't want to shoot myself in the foot like that.
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#5463
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,766
Bikes: Have two wheels
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#5464
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: TC, MN
Posts: 39,520
Bikes: R3 Disc, Haanjo
Liked 9,456 Times
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4,672 Posts
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#5465
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,766
Bikes: Have two wheels
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We're in zone 5. No timers needed.
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#5466
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,318
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,222 Times
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4,274 Posts
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#5467
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,318
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,222 Times
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4,274 Posts
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#5468
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Greenville SC
Posts: 4,189
Bikes: 1975 Motobecane Grand Jubile, 2020 Holdsworth Competition, 2022 Giant Trance 29 3
Liked 3,784 Times
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1,278 Posts
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#5469
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,766
Bikes: Have two wheels
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2,552 Posts
I assume that, if you want a gravel lot, you need to do something to stop things from growing. Sounds like a major undertaking.
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#5470
VFL For Life
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Knoxville, TN
Posts: 51,727
Bikes: Velo Volmobile
Liked 1,944 Times
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1,370 Posts
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#5471
VFL For Life
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Knoxville, TN
Posts: 51,727
Bikes: Velo Volmobile
Liked 1,944 Times
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1,370 Posts
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#5472
Administrator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Hudson Valley, NY
Posts: 33,145
Bikes: Merlin Cyrene '04; Bridgestone RB-1 '92
Liked 6,885 Times
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3,580 Posts
![EEK!](images/smilies/eek.gif)
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#5473
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,766
Bikes: Have two wheels
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The rjones28 lawns have biodiversity. I just make everything the same height from time-to-time.
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#5474
Administrator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Hudson Valley, NY
Posts: 33,145
Bikes: Merlin Cyrene '04; Bridgestone RB-1 '92
Liked 6,885 Times
in
3,580 Posts
__________________
See, this is why we can't have nice things. - - smarkinson
Where else but the internet can a bunch of cyclists go and be the tough guy? - - jdon
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#5475
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,766
Bikes: Have two wheels
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