Quote:
Originally Posted by Teed_Off
I live in Hadley and several weeks ago SECO replaced my electric meter with their upgraded meter. Four weeks later when I received my water bill the irrigation consumption was nearly doubled from the previous month. I checked my sprinkler heads to see if I had a leak and all seemed normal, so I checked my Hunter control module and found three issues:
1. In addition to my set time to water at 3:00am an extra cycle was added at 1:00am! Somehow I was watering twice as much.
2. The set time was incorrect by several hours even though I had changed it when daylight savings ended.
3. The 9v battery was dead.
I also have observed that other homes in my neighborhood are now running their sprinklers at times that had not previously.
I reprogrammed my controller and replaced the battery. By chance I spoke with an irrigation repair guy who was servicing a nearby home a few days later and told him my observations. He commented that he’s seen this happen to others.
My advice: if SECO recently changed out your electric meter then check your program and replace your 9v battery.
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Note that the 9 volt battery has nothing to do with the watering schedule. The battery is only used to program a new system when the house power has not yet been turned on. And then it is used by the contractor to program a new system on a house that has no power. It is not a backup power system. The 9 volt battery is optional and can be removed. A dead battery should have no effect on the watering schedule.