United Sprinklers – Sprinkler Winterization Near Me

Should I Leave My Sprinkler Timer On After Winterizing?

Short answer from 30+ seasons in Metro Detroit: Yes—leave the controller ON after a proper blowout. For pump/lake/well systems, leave the controller ON but disable pump-start and shut the pump off at the electrical panel. For city-water systems, leaving the timer ON is the cleanest, simplest option.

City-Water Systems

  • Leave controller ON (keeps time, Wi-Fi, schedules, logs).
  • Optional: set a long Rain Delay / Pause / Standby if you want visual “paused.” Not required for safety.
  • Lines are dry after blowout; a scheduled run simply opens a dry valve.

Pump / Lake / Well Systems

  • Leave controller ON for clock/app access.
  • Disable Pump-Start / Master Valve in the controller (or pump relay).
  • Turn the pump breaker OFF at the electrical panel (belt-and-suspenders).
  • Note those settings on the paper Winterizing Report I leave behind.

Why I Leave Controllers ON

  • Clock & Wi-Fi stay correct (no spring “what time is it?” surprises).
  • Schedules & zone names don’t get wiped by a long power-off.
  • App/firmware updates keep working during the off-season.
  • If a zone “runs,” there’s no water pressure in a city-water system—harmless. On pump systems, we’ve disabled pump-start so nothing spins dry.

Exactly What I Set at Winterizing

For City-Water
  1. Close irrigation supply, blow to a clean mist zone-by-zone.
  2. Open backflow test cocks so the shell can’t hold water.
  3. Leave the drain plug off or partially threaded for 24–72 hours in case the shutoff seeps.
  4. Controller stays ON. Optional: set a long Rain Delay if you want a “paused” badge in the app.
For Pump/Lake/Well
  1. Same safe blowout to mist, open test cocks, leave drain path.
  2. Disable pump-start / MV in the controller (global or per station).
  3. Switch OFF the pump breaker at the panel and label it.
  4. Controller stays ON for clock/app access over winter.

Brand Quick Paths (So You Can Check My Work)

Rain Bird (ESP-TM2 / ESP-ME3)
  • City: Leave ON; optional long Rain Delay (Advanced→Seasonal Adjust/Rain Delay).
  • Pump: MV/Pump OFF in wiring/options; pump breaker OFF.
Hunter (Pro-C / X2 / Hydrawise)
  • City: Leave ON; optional System Off or Rain Delay.
  • Pump: Disable Master Valve/Pump (global or per station); pump breaker OFF.
Rachio
  • City: Leave ON or use Standby Mode.
  • Pump: Accessories → Pump Relay OFF; breaker OFF.
Orbit B-hyve / Toro / Irritrol
  • Leave ON for clock/app; use the model’s Pause/Delay if desired.
  • For pumps: disable master valve/pump output and switch the breaker OFF.

Not sure which you have? Text me a photo of the controller face and terminal strip; I’ll tell you exactly which toggle to flip.

Your 2-Minute End-of-Season Check

City-Water
  • Controller screen lit, date/time correct.
  • Backflow test cocks open; drain area dry within 24–72 hours.
  • If you see a program “run,” that’s fine—lines are dry.
Pump/Lake/Well
  • Controller ON; Pump-Start disabled.
  • Pump breaker OFF at panel (tag it).
  • No pump noise if a schedule runs. That’s the safety check.

Common Mistakes I See (Skip These)

  • Turning the controller OFF all winter, then losing clock/schedules.
  • Leaving a pump enabled in software while the app runs “Test All Stations.”
  • Only flipping a controller setting for pumps but not switching the breaker OFF.
  • Closing the #1 shutoff and not venting the backflow body (test cocks closed = pocket of water).

FAQ

Will leaving it ON water the lawn?

No. On city-water systems the supply is closed and lines are dry. On pump systems, we’ve disabled pump-start and shut the breaker off.

Should I unplug the controller?

You can, but I recommend leaving it ON so the time, Wi-Fi, and app access stay intact.

Do I need Rain Delay?

Optional. It’s a visual “paused” badge some folks like. Safety doesn’t depend on it.

Power outage?

Most modern controllers retain programs. Leaving the unit ON helps the clock resync when power returns.

Back to Top