Monday, October 12, 2015

Rachio at the 2015 CEDIA Expo in Dallas



Rachio will be at the CEDIA 2015 expo, located in Dallas this year.

We will be in booth 8119.

Come see us! We would love to chat.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Rachio Smart Sprinkler Controller Is SWAT Tested



Rachio is proud to announce that the Irrigation Association has completed testing of the Rachio smart sprinkler controller using the Smart Water Application Technology (SWAT) protocol and have released the results. The Rachio controller scored extremely well in the testing.

SWAT is the other major water efficiency program besides the EPA's WaterSense certification.

What's the difference between SWAT and WaterSense? Please see our explanatory article on the differences.

Now that our smart sprinkler controller is SWAT tested, it is available for a wider range of rebates from municipalities. Check with your local water provider to see if your purchase qualifies, or see our list of known SWAT rebate municipalities.

If you have any questions, you can always reach out on the support site.

Rachio Wins the “Vendor To Watch Award” at SWS 2015



Rachio was named Vendor To Watch at the 2015 Smart Water Summit. We are honored!

There were 43 participating smart water technology companies in three award categories: best smart water solution, smart water vendor to watch, and best overall boardroom presentation).

Please see the press release for more information.

The Smart Water Summit is hosted by Smart Grid Summits, and focuses on water municipality issues.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Rachio at WaterSmart Innovations 2015 in Las Vegas






















Rachio will be at the WaterSmart Innovations 2015 conference, located in Las Vegas.

We will be at booth 321.

Come see us! We would love to chat.

Friday, October 2, 2015

EPA WaterSense versus SWAT





If you are an irrigation or water nerd like us, you've heard of the two major types of water efficiency programs: WaterSense and SWAT. But what are the differences?

First, a bit of historical context.

SWAT History

SWAT, or Smart Water Application Technologies, an initiative of the Irrigation Association (IA), is a national partnership of water purveyors and irrigation industry representatives that began in 2002. Stakeholders developed SWAT testing protocols to assess and document product performance in order to better promote water-efficient technologies. Testing protocols have been developed for products like weather-based irrigation controllers and rain sensors. Water utilities rely on SWAT testing protocols because they provide credible, independent product testing data that validates the water-saving potential of irrigation technologies. To become SWAT tested, the manufacturer must pay for the testing. When SWAT was created, many municipalities used it as a basis for offering rebates on efficient products.

WaterSense History

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) created WaterSense in 2006 as the water equivalent of EnergyStar, a voluntary program to promote the efficient use of water. WaterSense is also a broader program, as it covers non-irrigation products like toilets and showerheads. Like SWAT, many municipalities offer rebates on water bills for WaterSense certified products.

The Differences

In broad terms, SWAT came first, and WaterSense adopted SWAT's testing protocols with a few minor changes.
  • Testing versus certification. A product can be WaterSense certified based upon meeting certain requirements. However, WaterSense does not provide the complete testing results. SWAT, on the other hand, does not provide certification. Instead, SWAT reports performance of products without judgment, releasing results to the public. In other words, WaterSense is a pass/fail certification, while SWAT releases complete testing results for buyers to review themselves. 
  • Minimum runtimes. WaterSense added minimum run times so that sprinklers will apply a minimum amount of water that will soak into the soil. 
  • Missing data from the reference weather station. Adds requirements to compensate when there is missing weather data. 
  • Rainfall requirement. WaterSense added a requirement that there be at least 4 individual days with 0.10 inches or more of gross rainfall. This tests how the controller handles rain. 
  • Order of operations in calculating the water balance. Because these programs are for weather-based or evapotranspiration (ET) controllers, calculating when irrigation needs to occur is a major concern. SWAT calculates the water balance in the following order: ET, rainfall, and then irrigation. WaterSense changed the calculation to the following: ET, irrigation, and then rainfall. SWAT’s approach is to maximize the benefit of rainfall first, then add irrigation. 

What does this mean in practice?

The differences between SWAT and WaterSense largely come from the fact that WaterSense was tested in Florida, where it rains regularly. This meant they could not properly test products without removing rainfall largely from the equation, particularly future rainfall. As such, WaterSense controllers do not account for future rain; only how it handles irrigation after a rainfall.

Take the situation where an irrigation schedule is supposed to run at 4pm, but rain is forecasted to occur at 10pm. A controller that irrigated at 4pm would likely pass EPA certification, but receive low scores from SWAT as the controller didn’t account for future rainfall and skip the scheduled irrigation event.

What This Means For You

With competing testing protocols, it can be confusing to know which one to trust. However, here are some guidelines:
  • Both programs signal a water efficient product. Because they are based on roughly the same protocols, both programs are excellent. 
  • Check with your water provider for available rebates. While saving water by itself is admirable, if you are going to pay for new hardware, make sure to see if you can save money on your purchases as well. 
  • Although SWAT came first, WaterSense has overtaken it as the most popular program for testing the validity of manufacturers’ water saving claims. This is likely due to the wider range of products that WaterSense covers, as well as WaterSense being created by the EPA, a well-known government agency. 
  • While WaterSense is currently more popular, water municipalities in the west have a higher likelihood of offering rebates based on SWAT.