Baseline Systems BaseStation 3200 User Manual

Page 101

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BaseStation 3200 Advanced Irrigation Controller Manual

primary zone

The zone within a scheduling group that all other linked zones are linked to. Changing the

programming on this zone will adjust the programming on all linked zones, resulting in

saved time and consistency. If you are using a biSensor, the primary zone is the zone that

the sensor is connected to.

program

A program is a controller programming concept used to organize watering events. Each

program can have different schedules, water days, watering strategies, master valves, etc.

The BaseStation 3200 supports up to 20 programs.

pump start

A relay or relay-type device that initiates turn on of a pump, typically a high horsepower

electrical or motor driven pump.

runoff

When the soil moisture content is at the saturation level, any excess water from rain,

snow melt, or irrigation drains to a low point in the landscape

saturation

When the soil moisture content is at this level, nearly all of the spaces between soil

particles are filled with water. After a soil has reached saturation, it does not become

more saturated; although, in some situations where water is trapped, it can become

flooded.

scheduling group

A group of one or more zones that have been linked together for irrigation scheduling. A

scheduling group must have one primary zone, and may have one or more linked zones.

Irrigation for all zones in a scheduling group will follow the watering strategy of the

primary zone, but actual irrigation run times and soak/cycle behavior will scale as

programmed relative to the primary zone.

soak cycle

When a zone waters using a soak cycle, the total watering run time includes periods of

watering (run times) interspersed with periods of non-watering times (soak times).

soil-moisture

content

The ratio of the volume of contained water in a soil compared with the entire soil volume

soil-moisture

deficit

When soil dries (for example, by evaporation), the measurable shortage of water in the

soil is known as the soil-moisture deficit. It also refers to the amount of water needed to

return to field-capacity moisture content.

time domain

transmission (TDT)

A measurement of how much the electrical signals in the soil are slowed down by the

presence of water

timed zone

Any zone programmed to water on a time/day schedule, not a smart irrigation schedule

transpiration

The loss of water vapor from parts of plants. Water is lost primarily from the pores on the

leaves but also from stems, flowers, and roots

two-wire

This site wiring technique consists of a cable with an outer insulation, around two internal

insulated wires, being used to provide communication and power for all valves and other

devices throughout the site. It provides full two-way communication much like a

computer network.

upper limit

This water strategy is programmed by setting the schedule to water with Historical ET

Calendar day intervals, or alternatively with specific days of the week, and then setting

the biSensor to adjust the water run time to “fill up” the moisture to the upper limit (field

capacity). The controller will water a program at each start time and will modify the run

time based on the moisture depletion level.

valve

A device that opens to allow water to flow to the sprinkler heads or emitters in a zone. It

closes to halt watering for that zone.

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