Helping my Dad Dig Out a Valve Box

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • My parents just moved in to the neighborhood a couple of months ago, and the house they bought has a seriously goofy sprinkler system. Here we dig out a valve box in preparation for a new valve system to be installed in a different location. The new system will have new, better valves, and most importantly, my dad will know what's going on beneath his dirt in this area of his new lawn.
    Music:
    Wake Up by MBB / mbbofficial
    Creative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported - CC BY-SA 3.0
    Free Download / Stream: bit.ly/2CDshIl
    Music promoted by Audio Library • Wake Up - MBB (No Copy...

Komentáře • 13

  • @gregfaris6959
    @gregfaris6959 Před 2 měsíci

    Nice job! Beautiful trenching work.
    It’s always a pleasure to see people taking pride in workmanship.
    Of course I have a couple of nitpicks though!
    Instead of splicing the wire, why not run a new wire completely? And while you’re at it, run it in a conduit so it can be easily pulled through and replaced the day you need to add a valve, or run a network cable for home automation etc?? Compared to all the work you did this would have been a small addition.
    But if you want to just splice it on, that’s fine, and I like the access service hatch too, but you should have used an IP67 enclosure with a terminal block or connectors. They’re about $3.
    You could have used an automatic drain so you don’t need to do anything to winterize it, but then maybe the manual drain you installed is a more robust solution.
    My biggest gripe though is, “I know where everything’s at for the future…”.
    The best thing to do with that knowledge is to DOCUMENT it copiously, so it doesn’t disappear the day you do - or even the day you forget. It’s so easy to take pictures today - print them out and put them in a folder with measurements, calculations, parts lists and notes. The next person to have to work on it (and it will very likely be yourself) will be eternally grateful.

  • @diamond6256
    @diamond6256 Před rokem

    I can't believe they put the valve box and components in the yard and not closer to the house. I made a diagram for all my heads and valve boxes.

  • @bthomas24
    @bthomas24 Před 2 lety +2

    Hard to hear the speaking and then the music is incredibly loud so have to turn it down. Good video. Would have been better if the sound was normalized better

  • @richardstephens2294
    @richardstephens2294 Před 4 lety

    Very helpful, thanks! I have essentially the same problem, planning on something similar to this setup now.

  • @RhiRhiRhianna
    @RhiRhiRhianna Před rokem +1

    You didn’t show when you guys removed the green box. That was the part I wanted to know how to do.

    • @JimmyLewisMows
      @JimmyLewisMows  Před rokem

      It’s just a box. Dig it out until you can move it.

  • @pilgrimtiger2023
    @pilgrimtiger2023 Před rokem

    Thanks Jimmy

  • @joegillie8920
    @joegillie8920 Před 4 lety +1

    "Super Goofy"...!!!....Man, you ain't kidding! It is why I watch this video! Seems like it was Beavis and Butthead who worked on things in my house! Next house (I'm) building!!! Thank You!

  • @lovemylennon
    @lovemylennon Před rokem

    We were just told that two of our valve boxes are directly under a tree! I like the tree, so how much does it usually cost to reroute the valve box like you did here?

  • @akbychoice
    @akbychoice Před 9 měsíci

    Where is your back-flow preventer located?
    I don’t think the installer of our system put in a shutoff valve. For sure there is no drain valve.

  • @rickvaiBBB
    @rickvaiBBB Před 5 lety +4

    Nice video but the volume screaming was too much to see the end.

  • @alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2

    Do completely submerged sprinkler valves still work and function properly?

    • @desidog4169
      @desidog4169 Před 2 lety

      I have the same situation. In my case, they have been working fine for years. Eventually, I will have to deal with dirt and electrical problems