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Take the rotor, leave the body...

5.1K views 24 replies 14 participants last post by  Mike Leary  
#1 ·
Am I the only person who has never been able to successfully remove the rotor from its body while it's still in the ground? In every case I've tried, the sprinkler will release from the NPT elbow before it will disassemble in the ground.

I know it's very easy to cut the sod and remove the whole sprinkler that way, but for once I'd like to avoid it.

Any tips?

Thanks.
 
#8 ·
we routinely "screw out, screw in". cut about 5" in diameter around the head. then just unscrew the head off the fitting and screw a new one back on. with PGP's, which is what we use, it works all the time. not so sure with 5000's.

just be careful when removing the old head
You take the whole head right off the elbow? Or just the guts of the rotor, leaving the body? I have taken the whole head off, but I didn't like it - the potential for dirt then inside the sprinkler is high, especially if it's at a low point and the line drains down once you remove the head.
 
#9 ·
I find it easier to remove the whole head. I a long bladed knife in my tool box and use it to cut around the top, then grab the top with channel locks and spin it out, then install new head. The whole process can be done in less than a min. The soil here packs nicely so it early falls back in.
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#12 ·
I guess I'll try some full rotor swaps, not worrying too much about the dirt I might get in the line when I spin the old one out. Should save some time. At the rate the PGPs I'm working with are failing anyway, a little dirt probably won't make much of a difference...

Thanks all.
 
#16 ·
#17 ·
Step 1 cut a small circle around the cap of head
Step 2 wedge a trowel firmly against the body of the head
Step 3 unscrew head from body with channel locks
Step 4 screw in new head
I thought this was standard in the industry hope I'm not giving away some big secret lol
Newer trick for me......but not a huge secret.
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#22 ·
They take out turf and soil around the sprinkler head so it can get crooked when the mowers run over it.
I also provide the mowing at my sites, bad haven't seen this problem yet. I find most heads are buried too low and end up stuck under the mat of grass encasing them. I don't dig all the way down with it when I'm doing spring startups, just enough to get the sod. Here we are a month later and I can't see most of the heads again.

I can see it being an issue if you remove too much dirt when using the trimmer, but I remove just enough to get the sod.
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