How to Use IrriPro for Efficient Landscape Irrigation Planning

How to Use IrriPro for Efficient Landscape Irrigation Planning

Overview

IrriPro is irrigation design software for creating hydraulic, layout, and component-quantified plans for landscape and agricultural irrigation systems. It helps size pipes, select emitters/sprinklers, analyze pressure losses, and produce bill-of-materials and professional drawings.

Key steps for efficient planning

  1. Gather site data

    • Measurements: property boundaries, planting areas, elevations, hardscapes.
    • Water source info: static/working pressure, flow rate (measured with a flow test), pumping details.
    • Plant water needs: plant types, plant factor, irrigation frequency.
  2. Set project defaults

    • Units: choose metric or imperial.
    • Pipe roughness, safety margins, design pressure — set realistic defaults to avoid frequent manual edits.
  3. Create accurate base plan

    • Import a scaled site plan (PDF, image, DWG) or draw directly in IrriPro.
    • Calibrate scale using known dimensions.
  4. Place components logically

    • Valves and manifolds: position near water source and group zones by similar requirements.
    • Sprinklers/emitters: use appropriate spacing patterns (triangular/square) and match nozzle radii to available pressure.
    • Main/submains and laterals: run mains to minimize lateral lengths and avoid excessive fittings.
  5. Hydraulic calculations

    • Run hydraulic analysis for each zone: check flow, velocity, pressure at critical points.
    • Adjust pipe diameters to keep velocity in recommended range and limit head loss so sprinklers run within their performance curve.
    • Use zone splitting or booster pumps if pressure/flow is insufficient.
  6. Optimize layout for efficiency

    • Group plants by water needs to reduce irrigation run-time and wastage.
    • Minimize lateral runs and reduce fittings to lower friction losses.
    • Select low-angle, matched precipitation sprinklers or pressure-compensating drip for uniform application.
  7. Check and iterate

    • Review reports: BOM, pressure/flow tables, and isometric schematics.
    • Simulate worst-case scenarios (multiple valves open, pump starts) if applicable.
    • Revise pipe sizes, valve locations, or zone configurations until hydraulic targets are met.
  8. Documentation and handoff

    • Export full drawings, hydraulic reports, and parts lists.
    • Include installation notes: trench depths, sleeve locations, valve box placement, controller wiring diagrams.

Practical tips & shortcuts

  • Use templates for common project types to save setup time.
  • Enable layer management to toggle electrical, irrigation, and planting layers.
  • Keep a library of commonly used components and emitters with manufacturer curves.
  • When in doubt, slightly oversize mains to future-proof capacity.
  • Validate software results with field pressure and flow measurements during commissioning.

Common pitfalls to avoid

  • Relying on assumed water pressure—always measure.
  • Mixing plant water needs within a single zone.
  • Overly long lateral runs causing uniformity loss.
  • Ignoring elevation changes—head loss/gain matters.

If you’d like, I can produce a 1-page checklist, a sample zone hydraulic calculation, or a BOM template tailored to a small residential lawn—pick one.

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