Dry spots or a zone that won't run? Call (689) 407-2616
Serving Clermont and nearby West Orange / Lake County

Sprinkler Repair in Clermont, FL

Winter Garden Sprinkler Repair serves Clermont and south Lake County, where the hills give irrigation a third dimension — pressure that changes with elevation, zones that drain downhill after every cycle, and slopes that shed water faster than heads can apply it. If a zone quit, a head is gushing, or the lawn has opinions, call (689) 407-2616 or send the callback form — one symptom is enough.

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Elevation is the Clermont variable

Flat-land irrigation assumes even pressure; Clermont does not cooperate. Heads at the top of a zone run weaker than heads at the bottom, and the downhill-most head often dribbles for minutes after shutoff — low-head drainage, the signature Clermont symptom, fixed with check valves rather than the new heads it gets misdiagnosed as. Slopes also shed water: run times that work on flat turf send half the cycle down the gutter on a grade, so cycle-and-soak programming (shorter, repeated runs) is part of the repair conversation here in a way it is not elsewhere.

Soil shifts the picture too — sandy hilltops drain instantly while transitional pockets hold water, sometimes inside one yard. The zone-by-zone check reads pressure and runoff together, because in Clermont a “broken sprinkler” is often a system fighting its terrain with the wrong settings.

Services available in Clermont

The full lineup runs here as it does metro-wide: head repair, valve repair, controller and timer work, and leak location and repair — plus programming around the local watering restrictions.

System acting up in Clermont?

Send the form with your neighborhood and the symptom. Most repairs are diagnosed and priced in one visit.

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Frequently asked questions

Why does one head leak for minutes after the zone stops?

Low-head drainage — the zone's water draining out the lowest head. Check valves in the downhill heads fix it; the head itself is usually fine.

Water runs down the street during every cycle. Broken pipe?

More often slope runoff — run times exceeding what the grade absorbs. Cycle-and-soak programming usually fixes it without touching hardware, and the visit checks for real leaks while it is there.

Top of my yard is always drier than the bottom. Normal?

It is the elevation pressure gradient — manageable with nozzle selection and zone adjustments once it is measured rather than guessed at.

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