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Fixing a Lawn With Severe Pressure Issues Across Zones

A Real Homeowner Story (And Why Pressure Problems Are So Misunderstood)

One of the more frustrating irrigation calls we get sounds something like this:

“Bob, some zones blast water… others barely run. What’s going on?”

And if you’ve dealt with this, you already know:

👉 It doesn’t feel like one problem 👉 It feels like multiple problems happening at once

Dry spots in one area.

Muddy patches in another.

Sprinkler heads that mist.

Others that barely pop up.

After more than 42 years working with homeowners across Maryland, DC, and Northern Virginia, I can tell you this clearly:

👉 When pressure issues show up across zones, it’s almost never random 👉 It’s almost always a system design or balance problem

And in this case, that’s exactly what we found.

Let me walk you through it.

The Situation: “Every Zone Acts Differently”

This homeowner in Montgomery County had an irrigation system about 12 years old.

At first, everything worked fine.

But over time, things changed.

  • Front yard zones had very strong pressure
  • Backyard zones were weak
  • Some heads sprayed unevenly
  • Others didn’t pop up fully

The homeowner assumed:

👉 “Something must be broken.”

But here’s the truth:

👉 Nothing was technically broken

The system was just out of balance.

Step 1: Measure Actual Water Pressure and Flow

Before we change anything, we measure.

We checked:

  • Static water pressure at the source
  • Dynamic pressure while zones were running
  • Gallons per minute (GPM) available

What we found:

👉 Pressure at the source was strong 👉 But distribution across zones was inconsistent

That’s a key clue.

Step 2: Evaluate Zone Design

Next, we looked at how the system was divided.

And here’s where things started to make sense.

Some zones had:

  • Too many sprinkler heads
  • Mixed head types (sprays + rotors)
  • Long pipe runs

Other zones had:

  • Fewer heads
  • Shorter runs

👉 That imbalance creates pressure issues

The Core Problem: Poor Zone Balance

Think of your irrigation system like traffic.

If one road has too many cars: 👉 Everything slows down

If another road has fewer cars: 👉 Traffic moves faster

That’s exactly what was happening here.

  • Overloaded zones = low pressure
  • Underloaded zones = high pressure

Step 3: Identify Pressure Loss Points

We also checked for additional contributors:

  • Pipe diameter limitations
  • Elevation changes (backyard slightly uphill)
  • Friction loss over long runs

All of these added up.

👉 Not one big issue—several smaller ones

Step 4: The Solution (What We Changed)

We didn’t replace the entire system.

We corrected the design.

Here’s what we did:

Rebalanced Zones

  • Split overloaded zones into smaller ones
  • Reduced head count per zone

Standardized Head Types

  • Removed mixed spray/rotor setups
  • Matched heads for consistent flow

Added Pressure Regulation Where Needed

  • Installed pressure-regulated heads in high-pressure areas

Adjusted Nozzles for Proper GPM

  • Matched output to available flow

Cost of the Fix

Total project:

👉 $2,800

What the Homeowner Avoided

Before calling us, they were considering:

  • Full system replacement ($8K–$15K)

Instead:

👉 We fixed the actual issue for a fraction of the cost

The Result

After the fix:

  • All zones ran evenly
  • Heads popped up properly
  • No more misting or weak coverage

👉 Lawn improved within weeks

Why Pressure Problems Happen Across Zones

Here are the most common causes we see:

1. Too Many Heads on One Zone

👉 Reduces available pressure

2. Mixed Head Types

👉 Different water demands create imbalance

3. Poor Original Design

👉 System not matched to property needs

4. Changes Over Time

👉 Add-ons without redesign

5. Elevation Changes

👉 Pressure drops uphill

What Most Homeowners Get Wrong

Mistake #1: Assuming Something Is “Broken”

👉 Often it’s a design issue

Mistake #2: Replacing Parts First

👉 Without diagnosis, it doesn’t solve the problem

Mistake #3: Ignoring Early Signs

👉 Problems get worse over time

How to Know If You Have Pressure Issues

Look for:

  • Heads not popping up
  • Misting or fogging spray
  • Uneven coverage
  • Some zones strong, others weak

If you see these:

👉 You likely have a pressure balance issue

The Right Way to Fix It (After 42+ Years)

  1. Measure pressure and flow
  2. Evaluate zone design
  3. Identify imbalances
  4. Correct layout—not just parts

👉 That’s how you fix it once

Cost Reality

Most pressure-related fixes fall into:

👉 $800 – $3,500

Rarely requires full replacement

The Big Lesson

👉 Pressure problems are usually design problems

Not equipment failures

Final Thoughts

If your lawn has severe pressure issues across zones, remember this:

👉 The system isn’t random 👉 It’s reacting to how it was designed

After more than four decades helping homeowners in the DMV, I can tell you:

👉 The right fix isn’t replacing everything 👉 It’s correcting the imbalance

And when you do that:

👉 Everything starts working the way it should

Quick Answers

Q: Why do some zones have low pressure?
A: Too many heads or poor design

Q: Do I need a new system?
A: Usually no

Q: Cost to fix?
A: $800 – $3,500 typical

Q: Biggest mistake?
A: Treating it like a broken part instead of a system issue

This entry was posted on Wednesday, April 29th, 2026 at 10:00 am. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.