Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
What Do The Colours Mean on Drip Emitters? The colour coding on drip emitters represents their water outputs, and the flow rate of water the dripper will emit under different kPa conditions. 2 lph is red, 4 lph is black and 8lph is green.
Drip Irrigation Major Products • Drip products deliver water directly to the root zone. Use dripline for dense plantings where it’s cost effective to distribute low-volume water evenly. Use a system of precise emitter devices for sparse plantings where it’s cost effective to separately irrigate each plant. • Use drip to eliminate ...
Emitter Buying Guide. There are so many emitters on the market today, with many of them being very similar, it is almost impossible to choose which ones to buy. This guide will describe the differences between emitters and help you make the right choice for your irrigation system.
Color Coding of Emitter is as shown. 0.550” I.D./0.640” O.D./0.045” Wall 16mm Dripline Run Length
Color-coded to easily identify flow rate. Turbulent flow through a unique labyrinth-water-passage design reduces likelihood of clogging. Uniform flow rate. Raised barbed outlet prevents water runoff along the drip lateral. Resistant to chemicals and fertilizers used in landscape applications.
XB-10PC: Black, 1.0 gph (3.79 l/h) XB-20PC: Red, 2.0 gph (7.57 l/h) Ideal for watering the root zones of plants, trees, and container plants. Xeri-Bugs emit water at rates of 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 gallons-per-hour (GPH) which allows soils to absorb water more completely into the root zones of plants.
Pressure-compensating dripline is available in different nominal flow rates with different emitter spacings. Please consult performance charts for actual flows. Product choice is dependent on site conditions and soil types. The choice of dripper spacing, dripline lateral spacing and depth is dependent on the types of soil and plants used.
Emitters are color-coded by water output; the tubing delivering the water always goes into the colored side. Unlike sprinkler heads, emitters with different output rates can be used in a single circuit to accommodate different plants’ watering needs.
From a PC drip emitter with check valve to a non-pc, easy to open and clean button, flag, adjustable, inline, or drip emitter on spike, our single point range of drip emitters provides plenty of options for any design requirement.
Despite their resemblance to the little inline valves, turning the flag on top will not regulate water flow. The flags are often color-coded indicating gallons per hour. For example, black for 1 gallon per hour, green for 2 GPH, and red for 4 GPH.