Friday, March 28, 2014

Irrigation Troubleshooting Guide

We were tasked in irrigation class to create a troubleshooting guide to use in the field. My group created a guide for Rainbird and Toro valve-in-head sprinklers. We had on each of these guides, a "won't turn off" and "won't turn on" section. These particular guides are not for electrical troubleshooting, but rather, for the hydraulic side of the sprinklers. Feel free to download these and use them at your course if you wish. If you do download them and use them, please give me a tweet (@rogers_braeden) and let me know. Thanks!

Rainbird Troubleshooting Guide

Toro Troubleshooting Guide

Monday, March 24, 2014

Electrical Lab

Today in Irrigation class we worked on creating an electrical troubleshooting guide for various electrical issues. We used Rainbird and Toro satellites for our various electrical problems that we had to diagnose. We had problems such as: wire continuity, bad solenoid, voltage issue, etc.

Diagnosing problems

We used Rainbird (left) and Toro (right) satellite controllers

Checking the resistance (Ohms) on the solenoid

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Irrigation on Auto CAD

For our final project in irrigation class, we are tasked to design an irrigation system for a golf course that we designed last semester in Golf Course Design class. We will use the fundamentals learned during the lectures in irrigation and use our Auto CAD skills to add the system to our golf course. We will create the most water efficient sprinkler set up and also take into consideration the elevation changes for our pipes. We will do calculations to figure out the friction loss and pressure loss over the length of the pipe as well.


Thursday, March 13, 2014

Golf Course Architect Presentation


Today we had a presentation by a Canadian golf course architect, Wade Horrocks. Wade has a passion for what he does and was a great speaker. First, second, and third year turf students attended his presentation which gave us some very insightful points on golf courses and designing them.

Some tips that he gave us are as follows:

  • The most important thing in golf course architecture is drainage
  • Don't let the architect push you to do something that you can't maintain afterwards
  • When playing the course, you want the golfer to use all clubs in his/her bag, so keep in mind the length
  • Longer is not always better
  • You need to fit into the scale of the site you are on
    • If you have a golf course with big mountains surrounding it, then make the features (bunkers, water hazards etc.) bigger as well, and vice versa
  • If you are renovating, resist the urge to change the style
  • Tell the architect you are working with:
    • The weather
    • Things that do and don't work well on the course
  • Hire the right individuals to do the job or it may cost you in the long run
  • Renovation should be a collaborative process
  • Get the most out of your architect

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Hand Mowing Guide and Video

Last semester we were tasked to make a guide and video on how to safely operate a walk behind greens mower. Below I have attached a link to the document that one of my fellow classmates in my group created. Credits for the document go to Ethan B. Also, the video is below for you to view and even use on your course if you choose to do so.



Mowing Guide PDF: Walk Behind Greens Mower Instructional Guide