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  2. Nano Ganesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nano_Ganesh

    The development in India of various wireless remote controllers began in 1996. Santosh Ostwal, an electrical engineer founded Ossian Agro Automation in Pune. [1] The application initially supported basic mobile phones and later built-in GSM modules named Nano Ganesh GSM. [2] Approximately 60,000 farmers in India have been using Nano Ganesh ...

  3. Hunter Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_Industries

    This acquisition marks Hunter Industries' first major foray into a market unrelated to irrigation or landscape products. In May 2016, the firm acquired Hydrawise, a manufacturer of Wi-Fi-based irrigation controllers and web-based software. [19] On January 4, 2016, Hunter Industries acquired Florida-based Senninger Irrigation. [20]

  4. Irrigation controller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation_controller

    Most automatic irrigation valves are diaphragm valves in which the water above the diaphragm must be discharged for the valve to open. In a hydraulic system, the controller and valves are connected via small plastic tubes approximately 4 mm (¼ in) in diameter. The controller opens the tube connected to the valve, allowing that valve to open ...

  5. GainSpan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GainSpan

    GainSpan created the GS2000 in 2013. It was the first chip developed to combine both Wi-Fi and ZigBee IP. [14] In January 2014, GainSpan became the low-power Wi-Fi technology supplier for Solem Electronique's WiFi irrigation controller and Wi-Fi outdoor lighting system. [15]

  6. Sprinkler system timer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprinkler_system_timer

    A sprinkler system timer is an electrical device that is used to set an irrigation sprinkler system to come on automatically at a certain time. Irrigation timers first appeared in the early 1960s to control large-radius lawn sprinklers, which at the time usually contained their own electrically operated valve (most golf-course sprinklers still use this type of actuation).

  7. Rain sensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rain_sensor

    Rain sensors for irrigation systems are available in both wireless and hard-wired versions, most employing hygroscopic disks that swell in the presence of rain and shrink back down again as they dry out — an electrical switch is in turn depressed or released by the hygroscopic disk stack, and the rate of drying is typically adjusted by controlling the ventilation reaching the stack.

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