Correct water source sizing is the foundation of a reliable irrigation system. An undersized source means low pressure and dead spots, while an oversized one wastes money on equipment you don't need. This article shows you how to measure your supply and calculate whether it can handle all your zones.
1. Measuring flow rate
The simplest method is the bucket test:
- Get a bucket of known volume (e.g., 10 liters / 2.5 gallons)
- Open the faucet fully
- Time how long it takes to fill
- Calculate:
Q = V / t × 60
Example: A 10-liter bucket fills in 25 seconds:
Q = 10 / 25 × 60 = 24 L/min (6.3 GPM)
Repeat the test 3 times and average the results. Measure during peak usage hours (morning, evening) to get the worst-case scenario.
2. Measuring pressure
Attach a pressure gauge (e.g., Generic universal ¾" gauge) to an outdoor spigot (¾" thread). Measure static pressure (tap closed) and dynamic pressure (tap fully open).
Typical municipal water values:
- Static pressure: 3–5 bar (45–75 PSI)
- Dynamic pressure: 2–4 bar (30–60 PSI)
Always use dynamic pressure for design — that's what your sprinklers will actually receive.
3. Calculating zone demand
Sum all nozzle flow rates in a zone and add a 10–15% safety margin:
Q_zone = Σ(Q_nozzles) × 1.15
Example: A zone with 8 Hunter MP3000 nozzles (Q = 2.1 L/min each):
Q_zone = 8 × 2.1 × 1.15 = 19.3 L/min (5.1 GPM)
If your source delivers 24 L/min, this zone works fine. But adding 4 more nozzles raises demand to 27.6 L/min — you'd need to split into two zones.
4. Pressure losses
Pressure drops due to pipe friction, elevation changes, and system components:
| Factor | Loss |
|---|---|
| 25 mm PE pipe (30 m, 20 L/min) | ~0.5 bar (7 PSI) |
| Elevation change | 0.1 bar per 1 m rise (0.43 PSI/ft) |
| Solenoid valve | ~0.15 bar (2 PSI) |
| Fittings (elbows, tees; Generic or branded) | ~0.1–0.2 bar (1.5–3 PSI) |
| Typical total | ~0.8–1.2 bar (12–17 PSI) |
Working sprinkler pressure = source dynamic pressure − total losses. Most rotors need 2.0–3.5 bar (30–50 PSI), spray heads need 1.5–2.0 bar (20–30 PSI).
5. Water source types compared
| Source | Flow | Pressure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Municipal supply | 15–40 L/min | 2–5 bar | Most common, stable |
| Well + pump | 10–60 L/min | 2–6 bar | Depends on pump curve |
| Storage tank | 20–80 L/min | 1–4 bar | Needs booster pump |
| Rainwater | 5–20 L/min | 1–2 bar | Needs filtration + pump |
Calculate in SmartPluvia
In SmartPluvia, you can set your water source parameters and the planner automatically verifies whether flow and pressure are sufficient for each zone. If not, you'll get warnings and recommendations to redistribute zones.