mol1jb
03-23-2018, 09:29 AM
Hey all,
So in IL most of us are at the end of our season. At this point you start reflect on what you learned and to think ahead at what next season will look like. From the 2017 season we expanded our 3/16 lines from 60 to 120 taps and from 2k ft of lines to around 8k ft of 3/16 lines. When our 3/16 was working well it was amazing. But we had some serious maintenance issues called animals that plagued our season. We are tapping on park district land so any sort of animal removal or thinning is not an option. So I had this idea that I have not heard of before that may reduce maintenance quite a bit on our 3/16 lines. As many of you know the main area of damage on 3/16 tubing setup is around the tree where the tubing lines and tree touch. Sections of 3/16 between trees had almost zero maintenance issues. The first image below is a rough drawing of what I mean.
18271
So my idea to combat this is to next season install my 3/16 lines with as little tree contact as possible. See next rough drawing
18272
Basically I am thinking of instead of running our 3/16 from tree to tree we would run each main 3/16 lateral as more of a main line up each slope and run longer individual tap lines to each tree off the main 3/16 lateral. At each tree there would only be a tap connecting the drop to the tree as the end line hooks had the most area of tubing and tree contact and thus were constantly torn up by animal chew. As you can see the idea is to create a setup where the tubing to tree contact is as little as possible to drastically reduce line maintenance. This idea is still in its infancy and in theory sounds good but in practical applications I am not sure yet if this would be a good solution to our animal maintenance problems. I look forward to your comments.
So in IL most of us are at the end of our season. At this point you start reflect on what you learned and to think ahead at what next season will look like. From the 2017 season we expanded our 3/16 lines from 60 to 120 taps and from 2k ft of lines to around 8k ft of 3/16 lines. When our 3/16 was working well it was amazing. But we had some serious maintenance issues called animals that plagued our season. We are tapping on park district land so any sort of animal removal or thinning is not an option. So I had this idea that I have not heard of before that may reduce maintenance quite a bit on our 3/16 lines. As many of you know the main area of damage on 3/16 tubing setup is around the tree where the tubing lines and tree touch. Sections of 3/16 between trees had almost zero maintenance issues. The first image below is a rough drawing of what I mean.
18271
So my idea to combat this is to next season install my 3/16 lines with as little tree contact as possible. See next rough drawing
18272
Basically I am thinking of instead of running our 3/16 from tree to tree we would run each main 3/16 lateral as more of a main line up each slope and run longer individual tap lines to each tree off the main 3/16 lateral. At each tree there would only be a tap connecting the drop to the tree as the end line hooks had the most area of tubing and tree contact and thus were constantly torn up by animal chew. As you can see the idea is to create a setup where the tubing to tree contact is as little as possible to drastically reduce line maintenance. This idea is still in its infancy and in theory sounds good but in practical applications I am not sure yet if this would be a good solution to our animal maintenance problems. I look forward to your comments.