What is the drip system?
The
drape system has long been offered as one of the most effective garden irrigation systems. In general, the drip system allows water to leak through the soil to the roots of the plant in a localized way. It is the best and most practical way in most areas of water garden plants, shrubs and even trees. With the dripping system, water flows through flexible tubing and supplies water directly where the most needed - through the roots of the plant. The water flow can even be treated to meet irrigation requirements for each plant.
parts that connect the water source to the dripping system are called the head assembly. The head assembly includes a timer or a manual control valve, a back flow preventor, a filter and a pressure controller. Each component has a clear function that ensures that the drip system works perfectly. For gardeners with a single drip line that is connected to the outdoor faucet, the faucet is the control valve itself. However, if the drip line is connected to the timekeeAci, is part of the timer of the control valve. The drip line is often connected to the water mains, then a separate control valve is required for each drip circuit.
The backflow prevention prevents water flow back to the water supply, maintaining the water supply clean and preventing the filter from clogging. Some filters come with a fertilizer injector. The fertilizer injector allows fertilizers to add directly to the water for the plant. The pressure regulator allows the gardener to reduce (or lift) the water pressure so that the water does not flow from the drip system too violently (or slightly).
pipes and fittings carry water from the head set to different parts of the garden. The drip tube is usually designed from black polyethylene and is very flexible. Theflexibility of the tubing allows woven through plants and wrapped around shrubs and trees. Smaller microtubing can be associated with the drip tube and can be branched in other directions.Bets are the best ways to keep the microtubization firmly on site.
most dripping systems are issued anywhere from less than one to two gallons (3.8 - 7.5 liters) of water per hour via the drip emitor. It is necessary to consider the soil and garden plants to determine which water outputs are best. The goal is to soak 60 percent of the root zone. The water flows down in sandy soil, but spreads wider than it flows deep in clay soils. If the garden is on the slope, more water emitters with a lower amount of water production may be needed.
In general, vegetables should have the smallest number of water emitters with the lowest rate of water production - less than one gallon (3.8 l) per hour is ideal. Other plants such as flowers, ground covers and small shrubs of astromes can also prosper with only one water emitter, but should have at least one gallon (3.8 l) per hour of water. Larger shrubs and trees may require two, three or four emitters - depending on the size of the tree - and can receiveTwo gallons (7.5 l) water per hour.