Electronic Watering Can

When [Deddies lab] was looking to keep their (rather large) Ficus Lyrata appropriately watered, they followed their motto, stuck a micro controller on it and whipped up an Electronic Watering Can .

The whole thing starts off with power that is switched on once a day for 15 minutes by a traditional mechanical lamp timer, and that is connected to a atmega8 micro controller running @ 1MHz which increments a counter by one. When that counter hits 7 the mega switches on a pump, watering the plant with roughly half a liter of water per week out of a bucket reservoir , which according to the article’s calculations should last about 4 months.

In order to assure that the pump does not run out of water a rubber duck was attached to a string, the other end is attached to a micro switch, and when the water gets too low the string is pulled, switching one of the micro controller’s pins low.

While we agree that it could use a low water indicator, that is trivial to add, and over all the project represents a great hack done on a Sunday using parts and materials already on hand. Join us after the break for a quick video too!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0YKamxX-mE&w=450]

10 thoughts on “Electronic Watering Can

  1. The article’s circulations?

    I can only imagine that you meant calculations. Seriously, are you guys intentionally placing grammatical and spelling errors in every single post just to mess with us? If not, I would seriosuly consider adding an editor to the payroll!

  2. Why not just switch a flow restricted pump on for 15 minutes a day?

    And I’m guessing with evaporation, that open bucket won’t last any where near 4 months as the water supply.

  3. This seems like overkill. Get a drip feeder with a funnel connected. Get the float valve to sit in the funnel (just like your toilet works), and have a small sprinkler valve (normally closed). connected to a 24hr timer, with one 15min notch pushed out.

    Timer switches one, releases water through the float valve. Once the pipe fills up the float valve will stop any more flow. after 15min the timer will turn off, problem solved. Over the next 23:45, the water in the pipe can slowly drip feed into the plant.

Leave a Reply to strider_mt2kCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.