GPM, PSI & CFM — How They Work Together (and Why Volume Wins for Blowouts)
People ask me: “What PSI do you use?” I set a modest 50–60 PSI. The real secret isn’t pressure — it’s air volume (CFM). Enough CFM keeps pop-ups extended, unseats check-valves, and pushes water to the nozzles so we finish on a clean mist without cooking parts.
Plain-English Fundamentals
Gallons per minute a zone uses in summer. Example: 5 rotors × 3.0 GPM = 15 GPM zone.
Force that pops heads up and opens valves. For blowouts I cap it around 50–60 PSI to avoid damage.
How much air the compressor can deliver continuously. CFM is what keeps multiple heads up and moves water out. Big tank ≠ big CFM.
There’s no perfect GPM→CFM conversion for blowouts (air is compressible; systems differ). The rule that never fails: use enough CFM to keep all active heads extended at a modest PSI.
Typical Water Flows by Head Type
| Head Type | Common Nozzles | Typical Water Flow (each) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed Spray (10–15′) | Quarter / Half / Full | ~0.5–2.0 GPM | Short throws but many heads per zone. |
| Rotary Nozzle (MP style) | Adjustable arcs | ~0.4–0.9 GPM | Slower precipitation; many on one zone. |
| Rotor (3/4″ body) | 2.0–3.0–4.0 GPM | ~2.0–4.0 GPM | Fewer per zone; long runs common. |
| Tall Sprays (6–12″ bodies) | Same nozzles as sprays | ~0.5–2.0 GPM | Side-inlet or deep cans can “cup” water; clear to mist. |
| Heads w/ Check Valves | “CV” / “SAM” styles | — | Need a bit more pressure to unseat (often a few PSI). |
How Much Water Is in the Pipe?
Visualize what we’re pushing to the nozzles before we reach mist:
| Pipe (ID) | Gallons per 100′ |
|---|---|
| ¾″ PVC (ID ≈ 0.824″) | ≈ 2.8 gal |
| 1″ PVC/Poly (ID ≈ 1.03–1.05″) | ≈ 4.3–4.5 gal |
| 1¼″ PVC (ID ≈ 1.36″) | ≈ 7.6 gal |
Add a little for manifolds, risers, and head bodies. That first 30–60 seconds is moving this volume; then we ride the mist.
Real Scenarios (Why Volume Beats Pressure)
Scenario A — 5 Rotors on 1″ Lateral
- Summer water load: 5 × 3.0 GPM = 15 GPM.
- Pipe volume: ~100′ of 1″ ≈ 4.3 gal to push to the nozzles.
- Blowout reality: At 50–60 PSI, you need enough CFM to keep all five rotor stems up while water clears. A big tank with low CFM will pop one or two, they’ll chatter down, and water settles back in the line. You end up blasting pressure spikes instead of moving water.
- What works: High-CFM flow keeps every head extended continuously. We finish on mist in ~60–120 seconds, then take short, cool passes so dry parts don’t overheat.
Scenario B — 12 Sprays Along a Drive
- Summer water load: 12 × ~1.0 GPM ≈ 12 GPM.
- Head behavior: Sprays pop quickly but many have check-valves; they must unseat for trapped water to move.
- Common DIY issue: Small plug-in compressor (2–4 CFM @ 90 PSI) pops a couple heads and runs out of breath; others never unseat. You see fog, not mist, and water lingers — especially in tall 12″ cans.
- What works: High CFM at modest pressure to hold all stems up and clear each run cleanly to mist.
Scenario C — Long Run + Elevation + Check Valves
- Complications: 150–200′ laterals, 12″ sprays with side inlets, and heads with checks near sidewalks.
- Why PSI alone fails: Pressure spikes don’t increase mass flow when your compressor can’t sustain volume. You’ll heat dry components and still leave “cups” of water in tall bodies.
- What works: High CFM sustains flow; 50–60 PSI protects parts. We stop when the exhaust is a consistent mist, not when it’s bone-dry air.
The Big Tank Myth (Quick Math)
You can’t “store” your way out of low CFM with a big tank. Here’s why.
- From 120 → 50 PSI you release only about 3.8 standard cubic feet of air.
- At a realistic need of, say, 40 SCFM during a rotor zone, that tank “boost” lasts ~6 seconds.
- Then you’re back to the compressor’s tiny continuous CFM… and the heads fall.
Continuous CFM wins every time. A modest 50–60 PSI with real airflow clears systems faster and safer than a small compressor cranked to 120 PSI.
Compressor Classes (What I See in the Wild)
| Class | Typical CFM @ 90 PSI | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Small plug-in “pancake/portables” | ~2–4 CFM | Pops a couple heads; can’t sustain flow. Lots of fog, water left in tall cans and long runs; motor overheats. |
| Jobsite 15-amp electrics | ~4–6 CFM | Better, but still struggles on rotor zones or checks. Slow and hot. |
| Gas “wheelbarrow” / twin-tank | ~8–15 CFM | OK on short spray zones; mixed results on bigger rotors/long runs. |
| Tow-behind pro rigs | ~80–185+ CFM | Keeps all heads up, unseats checks, clears to mist quickly at low PSI — the right tool. |
I run a high-CFM rig so we’re done fast at safe pressure — fewer questions, fewer failures, better results.
My Blowout Method (Why It’s Safe & Effective)
- Connect downstream of the backflow to protect it.
- 50–60 PSI cap at the connection; I don’t chase pressure.
- High CFM so all active heads stay up; checks unseat.
- Zone order: farthest first; watch for steady mist, not “fog bursts.”
- Short, cool passes once mostly air, so dry parts don’t overheat.
- Open test cocks and leave the drain plug off/partially threaded for 24–72 hrs so any weeping shutoff drips out.
- Paper Winterizing Report + text notes left at your door.
Quick “Will My Airflow Hold?” Estimator
- Spray zone (10–15′): 8–12 heads? Tiny compressor = pop-chatter-drop. Pro CFM holds them up; mist appears quickly.
- Rotor zone (4–8 heads): Needs sustained CFM. If one head drops when others pop, you’re air-starved.
- Check-valve heads: Expect a little more “oomph” to unseat, especially on long laterals and elevation changes.
- Tall 12″ sprays/side inlets: Clear to consistent mist; otherwise a “cup” of water remains and cracks cans in winter.
Safety Notes (Worth Reading)
- Never exceed sensible PSI to make up for weak CFM. You’ll just stress parts and still move water poorly.
- Don’t run zones bone-dry forever. Once it mists steadily, stop; take short, cool passes only if needed.
- Secure hose/adapter; no hands on fittings under pressure.
- Pump systems: disable pump-start and turn the breaker OFF before any testing.
FAQ
You’ll create pressure spikes, not sustained flow. Parts get hot, and water still lingers. I cap around 50–60 PSI and let CFM do the work.
The deep can (and side-inlet models) can hold a “cup” of water if you don’t reach mist. High CFM keeps stems up so that last bit actually leaves.
No — the goal is to remove bulk water and finish on mist. Tiny film is fine; trapped pockets are not.
It delivers 2–4 CFM. The tank boost lasts seconds; then you’re out of airflow. Heads drop and water settles back. That’s why small units burn out.