

🌱 Smart watering for a greener tomorrow!
The Rain Bird SMRT-Y Soil Moisture Sensor Kit is designed to enhance your irrigation system's efficiency. With a typical water savings of 40% or more, this kit includes an in-ground soil moisture sensor and a user-friendly control interface, making it easy to monitor and manage your watering needs. Its compact design and reliable performance ensure that your plants receive the right amount of water, promoting a healthier garden while conserving resources.
| Product Dimensions | 7.62 x 10.16 x 7.62 cm; 385.55 g |
| Part number | 5007798500694 |
| Material type | Plastic, Metal |
| Manufacturer | Rain Bird |
| Item model number | 5007798500694 |
| ASIN | B003L7CCIW |
K**N
I don't get why these new fangled smart sprinkler controllers exist. They will use the current weather report and future weather to figure out if your garden needs to be watered. No need for any sensors! Am I seriously the only one who sees how stupid that is? Not only is the weather station probably miles and miles away from you (which makes the report inherently inaccurate), the forecast is still speculative at best. Also, how will it know how much water the soil actually has? Complex algorithms that calculate the amount of water gets spit out by the sprinkler heads, the amount of runoff, the amount of sun and humidity and temperature? Really? So basically, rather than it being smart, those systems rely on hopes and dreams. Yeah... not gonna work, buddy. Oh wait, they're on wifi, so you can control it on your phone, even if you're not at home. OK, that makes sense. That way, you can tell it what to do while you're on vacation when when these smart controllers will keep screwing up your lawn. Now here comes the soil moisture sensor kit. This is a WIRED device, so no need to change batteries every so often. This is truly set and forget. Just bury it somewhere in your yard, and the controller does the rest. It'll figure out your field capacity (water capacity for your soil), then it'll give you a recommended 80% threshold where when the moisture level is below 80%, it'll allow watering. Cool. You want it at 75% because of the type of grass you have? Sure. just program it as such. You have very clay-ey soil? No problem. It'll calibrate itself for it. Deep roots? Well, just bury it deeper. Did it just rain a lot, so you don't need watering anytime soon? Well, this little guy will know and will stop the watering schedule until the soil is dry enough that it needs more water. It's simple. Rather than relying on hopes and dreams, it relies on a simple device that asks, "how dry is the soil?" Can't beat that. This thing is pretty precise as well, with good resolution of measurements. I dare you to find a smart sprinkler system that can beat this guy.
A**U
We installed it in the summer and we set the index to 18% and it worked fine for a couple months. As winter is approaching and the temperature cools down, the "moisture level"measured by the sensor drops with temperature. Even though after a heavy rain, the moisture level hardly gets up to 18. As a result, the sprinkler was still on. Now, I adjusted the index to 15 and it worked fine for the last couple weeks. The problem is why the factory not to program it with temperature compensation. Updates on December 25: The outside temperature drops to 60s in the day time and 40s at night last few days. The moisture level drops to 14% even it allows watering everyday. I need to adjust the index to 13% to work. I wonder what happens when the temperature drops further.
C**.
I am on my 2nd SMRT-Y sensor - having to replace the original 5-year old sensor that failed a few months ago. For reference, my SMRT-Y sensor controls a 2-station irrigation controller connected to drip irrigation for my residential desert / xeriscape landscape in the Mojave Desert of Las Vegas. I have no idea how it will perform in an irrigated lawn environment. However, in a drip irrigation setting for my conditions, it has performed flawlessly. On the Plus Side: This sensor does exactly what it's supposed to do. For my desert plantings, I have it set for 13.0% and the sensor was buried 8" directly underneath a series of drip emitters. I have the controller set to water every day at 7:00am, and if the soil moisture is above 13.0%, then SMRT-Y will suspend the irrigation cycle. In the summer when daytime high temperatures are normally >105 deg, it will usually allow an irrigation cycle once every 2-3 days - which is perfect. In the cooler winter months, this sensor may only allow an irrigation cycle one every 2-3 weeks - also just about perfect! On the negative side: This sensor only seems to last about 4-7 years. When I dug up the old sensor, it looked brand new - there was zero corrosion or other visible reason for it to fail - it just did for some reason. The stainless steel rods on the old unit looked good as new. The only reason I can come up with for why it failed is the internal electronics. The buried electronics are totally sealed in epoxy resin, so there was no reason for a contamination-related failure. Basically, the electronics of the buried unit just gave out. As a DIY tip: Make sure you use top of line, good water-proof wire connectors when wiring this sensor up - don't skimp on that part. The SMRT-Y is not the easiest thing to get wired-up and going, but once it's working and your settings are dialed in? It's golden Would I recommend it? Yes, Absolutely - it does save a lot of water. Just realize you'll probably be replacing the buried sensor every 4-7 years. If you're good with that going into the project, then buy it. This sensor beats any weather station setup by far. It truly is a water "thermostat" in your yard.
D**S
It does what it is intended to do and does it well. Installation was simple and straightforward with good instructions.
N**N
Two months ago if you asked me about this product I would have given it a glowing endorsement, but now I have serious concerns about reliability. It wouldn’t be so bad if warranty service was easy and you didn’t have to dig up your yard to replace the sensor. I had one of these in the ground for 2 years and it worked flawlessly. One day recently, I noticed my grass looked pretty crispy. All the valves but the one the sensor was connected to were working. The moisture sensor read “0.0”. After systematic troubleshooting (wiring, selonoids, connections, timer, etc) I confirmed the problem was the smrt-y. I couldn’t find anything about the warranty in the docs of online and, of course, Rainbird support is closed on the weekends, when homeowners need them. I needed to get it fixed that weekend so I ordered a new one. The kit was the same so I first tested the controller. Same issue. As soon as I swapped out the sensor, it worked great again.....for two weeks. My Hunter X-Core read “err” when the zone connected to the sensor ran. As soon as I took the smrt-y out of the circuit, the zone works fine. Hoping the Rachio3 gives me less headaches.
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