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3.6: Questions

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    44365
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    1. List three reasons for measuring water.

    2. What would you consider to be an acceptable accuracy for water measurement in irrigation? Explain your answer.

    3. What is the fundamental physical law used by most flow measuring devices?

    4. Which is more useful for determining depth applied in irrigation, a volume totalizer, or a flow rate indicator? Why?

    5. What assumption is made about flow rate when using Equation 3.3 to calculate depth applied?

    6. a. Show how Equation 3.3 can be rearranged to determine the depth applied.

    b. Show how Equation 3.3 can be rearranged to determine the time required to apply a desired depth.

    c. Show how Equation 3.3 can be rearranged to determine the flow rate required to apply a desired depth in a given time period.

    7. Why are long sections of straight pipe and straight channel, free of obstructions, required of upstream flow measuring devices?

    8. Why must the metering section of a propeller meter flow full?

    9. How many gallons per minute are required to apply 1 million gallons in a day?

    10. Why is it better to time the totalizer or a timing hand (index hand) of a propeller meter than to read the flow rate indicator directly to determine flow rate?

    11. A totalizer on a flow meter is timed to determine flow rate. The last digit represents 100 gallons. Ten numbers are allowed to pass during timing. The time was 1 minute, 30 seconds. Determine the flow rate in:

    a. gpm (gallons per minute)

    b. cfs (cubic feet per second)

    c. m 3/s (cubic meters per second)

    d. L/s (liters per second)

    e. ac-in/hr (acre-inch per hour)

    f. ha-cm/hr (hectare-cm/hour)

    12. A 130-ac field was irrigated. The totalizer on the system’s flow meter read:

    After irrigation: 60,325,100 gallons

    Before irrigation: 57,324,600 gallons

    Calculate the gross depth applied in inches.

    13. A 200-ac field was irrigated. The totalizer on the system’s flow meter read:

    After irrigation: 2,425 ac-in

    Before irrigation: 2,121 ac-in

    Calculate the gross depth applied in inches.

    14. A 7,000 square foot lawn was watered. The household meter registered 500,300 ft3 before watering and 500,708 ft3 after watering. Calculate the gross depth applied in inches (assume that other uses of water in the house were insignificant during the water application).

    15. A golf course irrigation system irrigates 60 ac and the flow rate is 1200 gpm.

    a. How many hours of irrigation will be required to apply 1 inch of water?

    b. If you can only irrigate 8 hours per day, how many days will it take to apply 1 inch of water?

    c. Suppose ET is 0.25 in/d and you want to apply this amount each day (assume you can only irrigate 8 hours per day). How many gpm would be needed?


    3.6: Questions is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.