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Services

Practical Sprinkler Services that solve the actual problem.

The goal is not to upsell a rebuild when a focused repair and system tune-up will do the job. Every visit is built around diagnosis first and a clear recommendation second.

Texas Licensed Irrigator #LI0028299 means repairs are handled with compliant irrigation knowledge, clear diagnosis, and no guesswork.

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01

Head repair, replacement, and coverage correction

Repair

Fix damaged sprinkler heads, clear clogged nozzles, and improve coverage so water lands where it should. A repair visit may include replacing broken spray heads or rotors, cleaning out mineral buildup, adjusting spray arcs, correcting throw distance, and realigning heads that are tilted, buried, or spraying into sidewalks and driveways.

  • Broken spray heads
  • Nozzle replacement
  • Overspray reduction

02

Leak and broken line repair

Repair

Pinpoint wet spots, pressure loss, and hidden line failures before they turn into landscape damage. Repairs can include replacing broken pipe sections, coupling repairs, valve-box leak fixes, and pressure testing. Even a small underground leak can create major water loss and long-term damage if left alone.

  • Valve box leaks
  • Lateral line breaks
  • Underground pipe cracks

03

Controller and zone troubleshooting

Repair

Get non-starting systems, misfiring zones, and odd scheduling behavior sorted quickly. Technicians check programming, station settings, electrical signals, transformer output, and wire connections to find whether the issue is in the controller, the field wiring, or the valve side.

  • Timer programming
  • Wiring diagnostics
  • Zone activation issues

04

Valve repair and solenoid service

Repair

Restore zones that are stuck open, will not shut off, or only work intermittently because the valve assembly is failing. Valve problems are a frequent Texas Sprinkler Service because heat, sediment, age, and electrical wear can affect how a valve opens and closes. The service may involve cleaning debris from the valve, replacing the diaphragm, rebuilding the valve internals, or changing the solenoid that receives the electrical signal from the controller. Homeowners often notice that one zone keeps running, a zone trickles when it should be off, or a station fails to activate even though the controller appears normal. Technicians also inspect the valve box for standing water, loose wire connections, and cracked fittings, since those conditions often show up alongside valve failure.

  • Locating valve
  • Replacing valves
  • Solenoid replacement

05

All-zone inspection and evaluation

Repair

Perform a full walk-through inspection to catch small issues before peak heat, drought stress, or seasonal wear turns them into bigger repairs. In Texas, this type of visit is useful because irrigation systems can develop hidden problems over time, including weak coverage, low pressure, broken heads, slow leaks, and controller issues that are not obvious until the system is tested zone by zone. A technician typically runs every zone, checks spray patterns, looks for puddling or dry spots, confirms that the controller is operating correctly, and notes any parts that need repair or adjustment. The goal is to evaluate overall system health and identify problems early, before they become expensive or wasteful. This service is often the starting point for homeowners who want a clear picture of what is working well and what needs attention.

  • All zone inspection
  • Coverage review
  • Repair recommendations

06

Seasonal maintenance and winterization

Repair

Prepare the sprinkler system for changing weather, including hot-season adjustments and cold-weather protection. In Texas, seasonal maintenance matters because watering needs shift quickly across spring, summer, fall, and winter, and systems may need winterization before freezing conditions arrive. This service usually includes schedule adjustments, minor tune-ups, checking for leaks, tightening fittings, replacing worn nozzles, and making sure the controller settings match the season. Winterization can also involve shutting down vulnerable parts of the system, draining exposed components where needed, and reducing the risk of freeze damage to pipes, valves, and heads. It is a practical maintenance visit for homeowners who want the system ready for the next weather change rather than waiting for a failure.

  • Seasonal tune-ups
  • Winterization service
  • Controller schedule changes

07

Dripline service

Repair

Repair and maintain drip irrigation lines that deliver water slowly and directly to landscape beds, shrubs, trees, and other planting areas. In Texas, drip systems are valuable because they reduce evaporation, target water more efficiently, and work well in hot, dry conditions where traditional spray heads can waste water. Common service work includes fixing broken drip tubing, replacing clogged emitters, correcting leaks at fittings, flushing lines, and checking pressure so the system distributes water evenly. A technician may also adjust emitters for plant growth, inspect for root intrusion or sun damage, and make sure the dripline is still matched to the landscape’s layout. This service is especially useful when beds look uneven, plants are stressed, or a drip zone is not delivering water consistently.

  • Emitter clogs
  • Drip tubing leaks
  • Pressure regulation

08

Wire splice and electrical fault repair

Repair

Fix damaged wiring so the controller can reliably send signals to valves and sensors throughout the irrigation system. Electrical faults are a steady source of repair work in Texas because underground wire splices can fail from moisture intrusion, corrosion, settling soil, or accidental damage during digging and landscaping. These issues often show up as a zone that never turns on, a valve that chatters, a controller that displays errors, or a system that behaves inconsistently after rain. The repair process usually includes testing continuity, locating damaged splices, replacing wire connectors, sealing junctions properly, and checking the common wire path back to the controller. In some cases, the technician must trace a fault across multiple valves to isolate the bad connection.

  • Corroded wire splices
  • Common wire failures
  • Controller signal loss

09

Other (or not sure)

Repair

Use this for sprinkler issues that do not fit neatly into the main repair categories. It is helpful when the homeowner notices a problem but the cause is unclear, the system has multiple overlapping issues, or the job may involve a mix of minor repairs across several zones. This category can also capture one-off service calls such as unusual noise, inconsistent pressure that comes and goes, or a symptom that needs a technician diagnosis before the exact fix is known. It keeps the list flexible without forcing every problem into the wrong box.

  • Unclear symptoms
  • Mixed minor repairs
  • Diagnosis needed

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