Yard irrigation projects often have control lines, underground mains and positioning requirements at the same time. The goal of the system is to let the sprinkler control line be responsible for valve action, and the Tracer Wire be responsible for locating non-metallic pipelines in the future. The uses of the two types of lines are clear and the paths are clearly recorded. Confirm the equipment and boundaries first, then determine the cable path, recommended wires, wiring key points, construction checks and reference materials to reduce wrong cable selection and callbacks.
Visual PlanMap the system first, then choose the cable
Start with the system layout, then confirm the cable specification. You can check equipment, paths, termination, testing and acceptance issues together before ordering or requesting a quote.
This diagram shows equipment relationships, cable paths, test points, and maintenance boundaries; actual construction is subject to equipment manuals, local codes, project drawings, and licensed professional judgment.
This system diagram shows equipment relationships, cable paths, test points, residential/commercial selection logic, and service boundaries. Actual installation must follow equipment manuals, local code, project drawings, and AHJ requirements.
The sprinkler wire controls the solenoid from the controller to the valve box; the tracer wire is laid continuously along the non-metallic irrigation main pipe, and a location where the positioner can be accessed is reserved at the valve box or test point. The two lines can be planned in the same channel, but with separate uses, connectors, and labels.
03Match the Recommended Cable
18 AWG multi-conductor Sprinkler Wire for valve control; 14 AWG solid copper direct burial Tracer Wire for irrigation main or water pipe location.
04Check Wiring Priorities
Control lines need to be wired according to zone/common and tested zone by zone; trace lines need continuity, waterproof connectors, access points and continuity tests. Both should be documented in the as-built sketch.
1
How the System Works
The operation logic of Sprinkler Wire and Tracer Wire's irrigation supervisor coordination solution is: the head-end device provides power, control, communication or supervision, the cable sends the signal to the field device, and finally the closed loop is completed through test points, tags and records. sprinkler wire controls solenoid from controller to valve box; tracer wire.
2
End-User and Project Selection Logic
The end user focuses on confirming the controller terminal, number of valves, common wire, valve box waterproof connector and partition label; the project engineer also confirms the wire gauge distance, master valve, pump relay, two-wire decoding system and maintenance drawings.
3
Installation and Commissioning Logic
The key points of construction are 811, controller terminal number, common wire continuity, corresponding valves for each zone wire, valve box waterproof joints, spare conductor insulation, cable path records, continuity test before power-on, zone-by-zone start-up test and maintenance labels. When debugging, conduct continuity/short circuit check first, then conduct voltage, voltage drop, communication or functional tests, and record the results.
4
Troubleshooting and Compliance Boundaries
Users can check the controller label, visible connectors on the valve box, loose common wire and contact 811; refer to an irrigation/electrical professional when it comes to 120V power, pump control, deep dig, two-wire decoding, or extensive faults.
The sprinkler wire controls the solenoid from the controller to the valve box; the tracer wire is laid continuously along the non-metallic irrigation main pipe, and a location where the positioner can be accessed is reserved at the valve box or test point. The two lines can be planned in the same channel, but with separate uses, connectors, and labels.
Control lines need to be wired according to zone/common and tested zone by zone; trace lines need continuity, waterproof connectors, access points and continuity tests. Both should be documented in the as-built sketch.
Project Note
Sprinkler Wire is not a Tracer Wire; nor is a Tracer Wire a replacement for valve control wires. Contact 811 before excavation and underground paths, colors and access points should be confirmed based on local requirements and project needs.
Related Applications
What other similar scenarios is this solution suitable for?
Put field devices, cable paths, recommended wires, and maintenance points into the same visual to understand the system before proceeding to selection.
System Relationship DiagramPut field devices, cable paths, recommended wires, and maintenance points into the same visual to understand the system before proceeding to selection.Jobjobsite and Cable RouteYard irrigation projects often have control lines, underground mains and positioning requirements at the same time. The goal of the system is to let the sprinkler control line be responsible for valve action, and the Tracer Wire be responsible for locating non-metallic pipelines in the future. The uses of the two types of lines are clear and the paths are clearly recorded.Define the System BoundaryPut the Sprinkler controller, valve box, irrigation main, 18 AWG sprinkler wire, 14 AWG. into the same relationship diagram, first confirm the equipment, and then confirm the wire.
Confirm the cable specification, installation path, product documents, and local codes before ordering or installation.
System Diagram
Visual Guide from Equipment to Cable Route
Use diagrams to first identify head-end devices, field devices, cable paths, test points, and maintenance boundaries.
System Connection DiagramUse diagrams to first identify head-end devices, field devices, cable paths, test points, and maintenance boundaries.Field Route Mapped to Diagram Nodessprinkler wire controls solenoid from controller to valve box; tracer wire.Service Points and Risk BoundariesEach line should be able to explain the starting point, end point, purpose, specifications, termination method and post-inspection location.
Confirm the cable specification, installation path, product documents, and local codes before ordering or installation.
Cable Selection
Select cable by specification, environment and risk
Check first when selecting 18 AWG multi-conductor Sprinkler Wire for valve control; 14 AWG solid copper direct burial Tracer Wire.
1. Overview of recommended wires
This case recommends: 18 AWG multi-conductor Sprinkler Wire for valve control; 14 AWG solid copper direct burial Tracer Wire for irrigation mains or water pipe positioning. Selection should also consider the number of devices, path distance, voltage/signal, installation environment, future expansion and compliance boundaries. 18 AWG multi-conductor sprinkler wire is suitable for common residential controller-to-valve-box control; 18/5, 18/7, 18/9 are reserved for selection according to the number of valves, common wire, spare conductor and rain sensor/master valve. When the distance is long, there are many valves, the soil is moist, or the pipe threading is complicated, confirm the voltage drop, outer jacket rating, waterproof connection and manufacturer's maximum distance requirements. 2. Specification selection table
- 18/5: Suitable for small residential irrigation systems in 4 zones + common, a small amount of spare conductor can also be left. - 18/7: Suitable for more valve zones, rain sensor or master valve reserve. - 18/9: Suitable for multi-zone courtyards, decentralized valve boxes or residential projects with greater room for expansion. - Common wire: Usually a common wire connects all solenoids, and any breakpoint may affect multiple zones. - Sprinkler Wire, Tracer Wire, and Outdoor low-voltage lighting cable have different uses and cannot be substituted for each other. 3. Conductor and conductor count logic
The brand advantage of VOLTIC STONE is that it uses pure copper conductors and does not reduce specifications. The value of true-gauge copper is not a marketing slogan, but more stable termination, more controllable voltage drop, more consistent wire drawing and stripping experience, and easier jacket markings and specifications easier to verify by project personnel. More conductors are not necessarily more professional, but insufficient conductors will definitely lead to callbacks. When selecting, you should first list all the terminals required by the current equipment, plus at least one or two for future spares. Professional projects should also be reserved according to the drawings. 4. Jacket rating and installation space
The same wire gauge may require different jackets and listing levels in different spaces. The requirements are different for ordinary wall, riser, plenum, outdoor, wet area, direct burial, underground pipes, mechanical space, and ceiling return air space. Don't just look at the AWG and conductor count, but also check whether the cable jacket identification, packaging label, datasheet, listing document and installation environment are consistent. 5. Colors and labels
Color is an aid, not the specification itself. Red, white, green, yellow, blue, brown, black, orange, purple and other colors are commonly used for low-voltage cables to help terminal identification; tracer wire colors are often used according to APWA habits to assist in identifying underground facilities; lighting dimming lines are often purple/gray or purple/pink for identification; red sheaths are common for fire alarm cables. However, wiring cannot be based solely on color during construction, but must be based on terminal markings, drawings and equipment manuals. 6. Length and packaging recommendations
End users often focus on lengths such as 50ft, 100ft, 250ft that are easy to purchase and handle; electricians, contractors and distributors, supply partners are more concerned about 500ft, 1000ft, reel packaging, sequential length markings, jacket marking, batch numbers and outer box labels. When purchasing, a reasonable margin should be added based on the actual path, and the color, length, and use should be recorded on the project label. 7. It is not recommended to choose this way
- Do not substitute regular indoor wire for wire requiring direct burial, wet location, UV or plenum/riser. - Do not use low-voltage control wires for 120V or other line voltage supplies. - Do not write security cable as fire alarm cable unless the actual cable jacket marking and certificate clearly support it. - Do not promote ordinary multi-conductor cable as OSDP/RS-485 dedicated cable unless there are truly shielded twisted pairs and appropriate construction. - Do not mistake Sprinkler Wire for Tracer Wire, and do not mistake Tracer Wire for valve control wire. - Do not write strong promises such as UL Listed, FPLP, CMP, HDD rated, OSDP certified, etc. without a certificate. 8. Product verification before placing an order
After entering the corresponding Product Line, first check the wire gauge / conductor count, color, length, jacket rating, shielding structure, cable jacket identification and packaging information. Understand the system first, then choose wire gauge, color, length and quantity; if the project conditions are uncertain, you can submit photos of the equipment, distance, environment and usage for confirmation. 9. Turn selection into purchasing decision
Product collections, single products, specification sheets, FAQs, contact us and solution customization forms need to be connected to each other. After understanding the system logic, you can enter the product page to select the color and length; if you are not sure, enter the solution customization form to submit the device photo, distance and usage. This can reduce the cost of mispurchases, returns, callbacks and later inspections. 10. Order review list
- Verify that the AWG, conductor count, color, and jacket rating in the product title match the actual item. - Confirm that there is enough margin in length. Do not buy based on straight-line distance only for long distances or multi-turn paths. - Confirm whether the wire is power supply, control, communication, alarm supervision, positioning signal, or multiple wire combinations combined in one jacket. - Determine if waterproof connectors, labels, junction boxes, access points, ground rods, terminals, heat shrink tubing or test tools are required. - Confirm that the listing terminology, jacket rating, shielding structure and installation environment are consistent, and do not mix wires with similar appearances across systems. - Save orders, equipment models, terminal photos and cable path records to facilitate future repurchases and support.
Installation Checklist
Start-up, termination, testing and delivery verification
Take photos, mark, cut off power, and check terminals before starting work; keep test records and cable paths after completion.
Before and After InstallationTake photos, mark, cut off power, and check terminals before starting work; keep test records and cable paths after completion.Test Against the System DiagramContinuity, short circuit, voltage, voltage drop, communication, function and recording are completed one by one according to the path.Turnover and Long-Term ServiceSave device models, cable numbers, connector locations, test results and repurchase specifications to reduce subsequent callbacks.
Confirm the cable specification, installation path, product documents, and local codes before ordering or installation.
Reference
References and professional information
Use these references to check code context, equipment requirements, cable selection, and installation decisions. For inspected commercial work, fire alarm, underground utility, public works, or line-voltage boundaries, follow local code, manufacturer documentation, AHJ direction, and licensed professionals.
Tell us the project scene, length, color and quantity
Tell us the device model, cable path, installation environment, length, color and quantity. You can reconfirm the specifications and applicable boundaries according to the system scenario before purchasing.