In the art of rotary irrigation sprinklers, for example, of the pop-up type disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,026,471, 4,773,595, 4,892,252, 4,971,250, 5,174,501 and 5,526,982, it has been found desirable to vary the flow rate of water flowing through the sprinkler and discharged from the nozzle head as it rotates to provide a more uniform radial distribution of water from the nozzle head, regardless of whether the water is discharged in a single stream from a single nozzle orifice or is discharged from multiple orifices in the nozzle head. Uniform radial distribution of water is desirable whether the water is being distributed in a full circular pattern or in a part circular pattern.
The present invention is directed to an improved rotary irrigation or water sprinkler which may be of the pop-up type or a rotary sprinkler which does not have a pop-up nozzle head. The irrigation sprinkler of the invention provides for automatically varying the flow rate of water through the sprinkler and thereby automatically varying the radial distance the water is discharged from the nozzle head of the sprinkler unit as the head rotates. In accordance with a preferred embodiment, the sprinkler of the invention includes a tubular housing supporting a valve body enclosing a rotary valve member which is driven by the output shaft of a speed reducing drive having an input driven by a water activated rotary turbine wheel. The output shaft of the speed reducing drive or transmission also rotates the nozzle head of the sprinkler unit. The valve member rotates within the valve body, and radial ports within the valve member cooperate with radial ports within the surrounding valve body to provide the variable flow rate of water through the sprinkler unit and into the nozzle head. The size and shapes of the ports may be designed to provide the desired variable radial flow rate of water from the rotary nozzle head of the sprinkler unit.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
Referring to
Referring to
An annular valve body 60 (
The upper end portion of the inner tubular housing 26 has circumferentially spaced holes or ports 74 which connect the passages 34 to the chamber 72 so that water flowing upwardly from the turbine wheel 18 through the passages 34 flows inwardly through the ports 74 and into the chamber 72 and then through the ports 42 into the chamber 68 within the rotary valve member 28. The valve body 60 has a top wall with circumferentially spaced openings 76 connected to the chamber 62. An annular retaining cap 78 is threaded onto the upper end portion of the outer tubular housing 12 and retains the valve body 60 against the upper end of the inner tubular housing 26.
As shown in
In operation, the water flowing upwardly through the passages 34 and into the center chamber 68 flows radially outwardly through the ports 44 and 66 when the ports 44 are connected with the port 66. As the valve member 28 rotates with the nozzle head 50, the port 66 are slowly closed and slowly opened by rotation of the ports 44 within the valve body 60. Thus the water flowing into the annular chamber 62 within the valve body 60 and upwardly through the ports 76 and into the passages 54 within the nozzle head 50 cycles between a lower flow and a higher flow rate. As a result, the streams discharge from the nozzle openings 52 move between a maximum radially distance and a minimum radial distance, thereby obtaining more uniform radial distribution of the water as the nozzle head 50 rotates. The more uniform radial distribution of the water from the sprinkle unit 10 also results in a savings of water when it is desired to distribute a predetermined volume of water uniformly over a particular ground area. For example, while a commercially available irrigation unit may produce 2.5 gallons per minute (gpm) of non-uniform water distribution, cycling of water flow through ports 44 and 66 of the sprinkler unit 10 may produce about 2.2 gpm of uniform water distribution. Thus the irrigation unit 10 provides approximately 15% savings of water as a result of the more uniform radial distribution of the water from the irrigation unit.
While the form of sprinkler unit herein described constitutes a preferred embodiment of the invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to this precise form, and that changes may be made therein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as defined in the appended claims. For example, the speed reducing drive 25 may be another form of reducing drive which is not a self-contained unit, or the rotary nozzle head 50 may have a drive separate from the drive for the rotary valve member.
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