Abstract

In all agricultural seasons, an automatic irrigation system has been designed to facilitate the automated provide of adequate water from a reservoir to field or domestic crops. One of the goals of this research is to determine how human control can be removed from irrigation while also optimising water use in the process. The method used is to continuously monitor the soil moisture level in order to determine whether irrigation is required and how much water is required in the soil. Various types of sprinkler irrigation systems were studied in this study, along with their design, construction, and installation. The planning was aided by the use of a rotating system to irrigate a small plot, which provides a suitable scientific basis for correct water scheduling, system evaluation, and minimising water waste and runoff. It was intended for a variety of crops. The significance of the design and installation is to provide the University’s irrigation research Field with irrigation field demonstration practise facilities that can be used.

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