The nozzles have the correct part number stamped on them 301AFD0.7-80.
The way I determined the opening pressure was to slowly turn up the pressure on the pressure reducer. They start slow dripping at around 30-35 PSI, and I start to get decent looking spray at around 50 PSI. There is no flow to get reduced initially, so the pressure should be equal everywhere in the system when the drips start. With just a single nozzle, I wouldnt expect huge pressure drops even at full flow.
The gauge is T'ed in right after the reducer with maybe 3 ft of 1/4" tube going to the solenoid, then maybe 2" between the solenoid and the nozzles.
Im wondering if air pockets in the system or some other slop - tubing pushing in/out of fittings, or expanding/contracting - could cause this? I didnt have all the lock rings installed, so Im going to repeat the test with them in place. I will also move the gauge to the solenoid as see what that says.
Speaking of solenoids, it also occurred to me to wonder if slow opening/closing could be part of the issue? They dont seem slow, but I would never be able to detect a few miliseconds of delay.
hmmmmm maybe I can do that after all. I will look at the video in the editor software. I can play it back one frame at s time with time stamps.....
The way I determined the opening pressure was to slowly turn up the pressure on the pressure reducer. They start slow dripping at around 30-35 PSI, and I start to get decent looking spray at around 50 PSI. There is no flow to get reduced initially, so the pressure should be equal everywhere in the system when the drips start. With just a single nozzle, I wouldnt expect huge pressure drops even at full flow.
The gauge is T'ed in right after the reducer with maybe 3 ft of 1/4" tube going to the solenoid, then maybe 2" between the solenoid and the nozzles.
Im wondering if air pockets in the system or some other slop - tubing pushing in/out of fittings, or expanding/contracting - could cause this? I didnt have all the lock rings installed, so Im going to repeat the test with them in place. I will also move the gauge to the solenoid as see what that says.
Speaking of solenoids, it also occurred to me to wonder if slow opening/closing could be part of the issue? They dont seem slow, but I would never be able to detect a few miliseconds of delay.
hmmmmm maybe I can do that after all. I will look at the video in the editor software. I can play it back one frame at s time with time stamps.....