Lawn Genie, Richdel & Irri Trol
These anti-siphon valves have been manufactured under various names with Irri Trol being the last
name plate. They come in 3/4" and 1".
Manual Richdel 3/4" & 1" (R706 &
R709) converted to electric with the
R 756 actuator. The R756 and
associated parts are not available. It
is easier to replace the actuator,
made by Orbit #57030, than repair
it. Don't confuse this type of electric
valve with the R711 & R713 valve
that were manufactured as electric
valve.
Repair
R711 3/4" and R713 1" model are no longer
manufactured. This series has a set of stainless steel
bands between the screws and the bonnet. As with the
R756 above, the most frequent failures are the breaking
of the metering screw (valve won't open) or a tear in the
diaphragm (valve won't close). The diaphragm assembly
(100232-H) will fix either problem and the same
diaphragm works in either the 3/4" or 1" valve. The
anti-siphon kit is specific to each size and are not
inter-changeable 3/4"- R217104, 1" R519108. However,
the anti-siphon kit (cap, float & seal) will work with
respective manual valves.
Also available for the R711 and R713 is a bonnet kit
(shown right) that includes bonnet, diaphragm, spring
and screws, solenoid is extra. The bonnet
kit,#R205TFKIT, will fit on either the 3/4" or 1" valve.
The most recent iteration of the
popular anti-siphon valve from IrriTrol
is the jar top version (2711DPR 3/4" &
2713DPR 1") shown left. The
diaphragm, 100236, will work in either
size as will the nut cap, 549101.
The 2700APR uses 8 screws to
attached the bonnet to the body. It has
a separate diaphragm from the DPR
series. Diaphragm model 539001 will
work in either the 3/4" or 1" version.
The 2700 series valves use the same
anti-siphon cap kit as the previous
valves.
Solenoids: all IrriTrol valves, past and present, take the same solenoid, the threads and depth
remain the same. However, the new solenoids have a captured O-ring already included. This means
that on older valves (R711, R713, R756 series) you will need to remove the existing O-ring in the
bonnet or the valve will not shut off. Additionally, the new series of valves (2700APR, DPR and
R2623 actuators) have the the solenoid threading into a manual operation bushing before threading
into the bonnet. This bushing, sometimes, will also have to be replaced if it is cracked or stripped.
***Discontinued***Rain Bird APAS 3/4" & 1" valves. The
APAS valve was generally sold in hardware stores and DIY
home centers. We were notified that as of May 2008 the
valves and repair kits were no longer available from Rain
Bird. We have recently found an actuator that will fit in the
APAS body so you do not have to cut out the valve to repair
it. The 1" 600100CH00 actuator will thread into the old Rain
Bird APAS body making the obsolete APAS functional.
Rain Bird
On the left is the Rain Bird jar top anti-siphon valve
JTVFAVB made in either 3/4" or 1". The diaphragm
#231771, anti-siphon cap kit #210067 and solenoid
#208588-01 will work in either size valve.
Shown on the right is the ASVF valve in either 3/4" or 1".
The diaphragm #210746-03, anti-siphon cap kit #151933
and solenoid #208588-01 will work in either size valve.
Hunter
Hunter's anti-siphon valve series is
the PASV and is made in either 3/4"
or 1". The diaphragm assembly
#332100, anti-siphon cap kit
#590306 and solenoid #434100 will
work on either size valve.
Brass Valve Actuators
We stock parts for brass actuators
(Superior) that go into brass valves.
They are not too difficult to repair and
it is cheaper than buying a new $40
brass actuator.
On the right is the IrriTrol R2623
actuator in either the 3/4" or 1" version.
We have parts for the newer version of
this actuator. The older style has a
bonnet that looks like the the R711
series with the steel bands on top. The
bonnet of the R2623 looks like the
2700APR version.
On the brass valve itself, usually
refered to as a Champion style
anti-siphon valve, we have repair kits
for the anti-siphon float (RK4-3/4",
RK5-1") and stem assembly (RK1-3/4",
RK2-1")
General Trouble Shooting Tips
Solenoids
1. A broken wire in the solenoid coil results in an 'open' condition and the valve will not come on.
Same result if a station wire is broken.
2. A shorted wire in the solenoid coil, 'short', will draw too much electricity and cause the controller to
either melt a fuse or trip a circuit breaker. The valve may operate partially for a small period of time
before the circuit breaker trips. Same symtoms if the station wires are wired wrong, an immediate
tripped circuit breaker will occur.
Diaphragms
1. For most IrriTrol valves, a tear or leak in the diaphragm will result in the valve not closing.
2. For most Rain Bird valves, a tear or leak in the diaphragm will result in the valve opening only
partly or not at all.
Anti-Siphon Floats
When water leaks out of the anti-siphon cap when the valve is 'on' either the gasket or O-ring is
damaged or there is something (rock or bug) preventing the float from sealing against the bottom of
the cap. Open the cap and clean debris or replace float/cap assembly.
Water Hammer
When water pipes in the house knock or bang when the valve comes on or shuts off the primary
problem is to much water flowing too fast through the valve. Sometimes you can put a check valve or
water hammer arrestor (compressed air tube) right before the valve and that will help. But the only
real solution is too reduce the amount and speed of the water traveling through the pipes and valve. If
you turn off some sprinklers and the water hammer abates on that valve you need to either change
the sprinklers to lower flow rates or add another valve.
Leaky Sprinkler
If you have a sprinkler that is always dribbling water hours after the valve has shut off, you have a
valve problem, not a sprinkler problem. Usually the 'leaky' sprinkler is the lowest head on the system
and all the water leaking through the valve drains out at the lowest point. The valve has either a bad
seat disc or diaphragm. Both are easy to fix unless you have a valve for which parts are no longer
available.
Orbit Watermaster Valves
Watermaster anti-siphon valves made by Orbit have had a variety of diaphragm-seat disc
configurations over the years. Some of the older valve diaphragms are no longer available. On some
of the newer valves that have a beaded diaphragm-seat disc assembly we have been successfull in
converting a certain type of Irri Trol 2700 DPR diaphragm assembly to work in the Watermaster
valve. We are still searching find a 'work around' solution for the older diaphragm series so you don't
have to cut out the valve.