This is a very thorough message of cleaning, and I cannot fault it. But in my experience, taking the sprinkler head out of the ground is rarely necessary. To service an entire station, I simply activate the station, then I use 2 inch wide paper clamps available at any office supply store to hold all the stems up. And then I unscrew the spray tops off 2 to 4 sprinklers at a time. I reactivate the station and let those sprinklers fountain up into the air. This will generally remove any debris that is down in the cup. I remove and clean the filters, replace them, wash and replace the sprinkler heads and then adjust the pattern. In this manner, an entire station of pop-up sprinklers can be cleared completely in two or three iterations. And nothing ever leaves the ground. A whole bag of alligator paper clamps can be purchased for the price of a single clamping tool, and works just as well if not better. and nothing ever Hass to be removed from the ground.
@@pc1408 Me too. Just a weekend warrior trying to keep up on the house-ownership mayhem. The binder-clip trick works great. I only do one head at a time and clean out the inline filter while I'm at it. When you're done, you can treat yourself to a cold one 😎🍻
Oh man, this totally worked on my Rain Bird. The filter was clogged, few seconds of rinsing it off, placed it back and bam....was working perfectly. Saved me money my friend....Thanks!
I need to repair a sprinkler that is shooting up like a fountain. I do have spares. This was very helpful with just unscrewing the top portion. I will unscrew the head as you noted and replace what is damaged. Much appreciated.
Helpful video, I wasn’t sure exactly what the issue was initially as the head was popping up but not sprinkling. I was going to schedule a service call but decided to try it myself and check the filter after viewing your video. Sure enough the filter was clogged and the cleaning process worked exactly as you demonstrated and the head is now functioning properly. I had to use a sewing needle to clean some of the filter heads that wouldn’t rinse with water, but no big deal. Interesting enough when my service provider did the spring start-up that same head having issues. They said it was repaired but obviously it wasn’t, I’m a bit annoyed they didn’t check the filter. Thank you for the clear and easy to follow steps.
I go to each faucet early in the spring season and with a mop bucket.. I take the assembly off and rinse it in the bucket and keep moving on cleaning the other 25 heads and no need to take anything into the kitchen.
The best way to clean the nozzle screen is to do it while the zone is running, don't be afraid to get wet. Than flip the screen backwards and use the water coming out of the head to clean it. If you get good at it then you can also put the screen in and screw the nozzle back on with the water running too.
You can do without the filter, but the nozzle openings will get clogged much faster and you will have to clean the nozzle more often which is much more difficult to do.
Looks like your head is leaking at the base of the sprinkler head. I noticed you had to pull it upwards to attempt to seal it. Those Van nozzles are terrible. They use so much water and the spray that it provides it super lack lust. Get yourself a 10Q nozzle for that corner and replace your head the thing is damaged.
Thanks for the TIP. I am not familiar with nozzles van vs 10Q etc... but your comment makes sense. I will try to get the 10Q nozzle and replace it, maybe do a video and side-by-side comparison.
the only problem with getting a 10q does not have a matched precipitation rate to the other heads on the zone. If your other heads are all VAN nozzles and you switch this to a 10q then this head could cause dry spots.
What a waste of time. With sprinkler off using sprinkler pliers tool pull up stem and lock in place with pliers tool. Unscrew head take out filter. Clean reverse. Do not unscrew entire assemble.
Don't like cleaning? Buy a new sprinkler head filter instead:
✅ ✅ 👉 amzn.to/3fWFTQq
Thanks!
This is a very thorough message of cleaning, and I cannot fault it. But in my experience, taking the sprinkler head out of the ground is rarely necessary. To service an entire station, I simply activate the station, then I use 2 inch wide paper clamps available at any office supply store to hold all the stems up. And then I unscrew the spray tops off 2 to 4 sprinklers at a time. I reactivate the station and let those sprinklers fountain up into the air. This will generally remove any debris that is down in the cup. I remove and clean the filters, replace them, wash and replace the sprinkler heads and then adjust the pattern. In this manner, an entire station of pop-up sprinklers can be cleared completely in two or three iterations. And nothing ever leaves the ground. A whole bag of alligator paper clamps can be purchased for the price of a single clamping tool, and works just as well if not better. and nothing ever Hass to be removed from the ground.
Thank you for adding to the value of this video! This is easily a $100 comment 😊
I’d rather do this technique, but I’m a novice
@@pc1408 Me too. Just a weekend warrior trying to keep up on the house-ownership mayhem. The binder-clip trick works great. I only do one head at a time and clean out the inline filter while I'm at it.
When you're done, you can treat yourself to a cold one 😎🍻
Love this paper clip idea.. thanks
I have a couple of vice grips laying around that also work well. Thanks for sharing.
Oh man, this totally worked on my Rain Bird. The filter was clogged, few seconds of rinsing it off, placed it back and bam....was working perfectly. Saved me money my friend....Thanks!
I need to repair a sprinkler that is shooting up like a fountain.
I do have spares. This was very helpful with just unscrewing the top portion. I will unscrew the head as you noted and replace what is damaged.
Much appreciated.
@Jim Tongas Thank you for watching!
Informative and to the point. One thing, I would also turn on the system before putting the head back on to blow out any debris that is in the line.
Helpful video, I wasn’t sure exactly what the issue was initially as the head was popping up but not sprinkling. I was going to schedule a service call but decided to try it myself and check the filter after viewing your video. Sure enough the filter was clogged and the cleaning process worked exactly as you demonstrated and the head is now functioning properly. I had to use a sewing needle to clean some of the filter heads that wouldn’t rinse with water, but no big deal. Interesting enough when my service provider did the spring start-up that same head having issues. They said it was repaired but obviously it wasn’t, I’m a bit annoyed they didn’t check the filter. Thank you for the clear and easy to follow steps.
Thank for your comment. I just want to let you know you can buy the filter about $1 a piece: amzn.to/3XfhInm
Thanks for showing this video, it helped me with my sprinkler head!
Thank you. Solved the issue and a good lesson on the parts of the sprinkler.
Thanks for this nice video guide, just fixed my sputtering sprinkler head
Thanks for watching
I go to each faucet early in the spring season and with a mop bucket.. I take the assembly off and rinse it in the bucket and keep moving on cleaning the other 25 heads and no need to take anything into the kitchen.
Thanks for sharing your sprinkler head cleaning technique!
Have fun pal
@@rustyshackleford436 I just completed checking all the heads and we are good to start 2023 Season
I found this very useful. Great video, simple and to the point.
Thanks for publishing this video. This is exactly the problem I have with one of my sprinkler heads and now I know how to fix it. ✌😁
Glad it helped
Holy smokes! Thank you man, great video, great advice. Thank you!
Best video I've seen on this subject. However, I'm having a real problem unscrewing the top. Someone tightened it way too much.
Wow! your explanation is very clear and easy to do. You even give us the links to where can we buy those, just in case.
Very useful thanks
Good video very informative and simple. Thank you for your time.
Helpful video thanks!
The best way to clean the nozzle screen is to do it while the zone is running, don't be afraid to get wet. Than flip the screen backwards and use the water coming out of the head to clean it. If you get good at it then you can also put the screen in and screw the nozzle back on with the water running too.
Thanks for the video. It was helpful
Useful video just what I needed thank you
How about a filter in the mainline? Would that help?
Thank you!
Thank you
You didn't have to remove the entire head. Just the nozzle and filter
Actually when you do that if you don't have the water running then the second you remove it a bunch of stuff falls back into the head.
Way easier to take the head off
He likes wasting time.
Great info
Rainbird pliers. Nuff said. Don’t go to all of this work like this guy does.
Mine isn't even making a sound but when I turn it on it comes up
The first thing you should do is replace that 4-in pop up with a 6-in pop up and put it down grade level it's about 4 in too high
Why not just use a pair of pliers to hold the stem up and then remove the head and filter?
Hi, do you actually really need a filter? Why not just not use a filter?
You can do without the filter, but the nozzle openings will get clogged much faster and you will have to clean the nozzle more often which is much more difficult to do.
@@DIYGEEKTEXAS I have found the pressure and distance to be better without those filters. Hope I don't mess up the sprinklers now
@@anthonycomposto9044it won’t mess up. You’ll just have to unclog the head if the head gets clogged.
Looks like your head is leaking at the base of the sprinkler head. I noticed you had to pull it upwards to attempt to seal it. Those Van nozzles are terrible. They use so much water and the spray that it provides it super lack lust. Get yourself a 10Q nozzle for that corner and replace your head the thing is damaged.
Thanks for the TIP. I am not familiar with nozzles van vs 10Q etc... but your comment makes sense. I will try to get the 10Q nozzle and replace it, maybe do a video and side-by-side comparison.
the only problem with getting a 10q does not have a matched precipitation rate to the other heads on the zone. If your other heads are all VAN nozzles and you switch this to a 10q then this head could cause dry spots.
What a waste of time. With sprinkler off using sprinkler pliers tool pull up stem and lock in place with pliers tool. Unscrew head take out filter. Clean reverse. Do not unscrew entire assemble.
You are welcome
Doesn’t debris also get caught in the assembly?