Broken Sprinkler Heads
Cracked pop-up bodies, snapped risers, missing caps — usually from lawn equipment or vehicles. The #1 most common repair.
Owner-operated sprinkler repair across North Richland Hills, Hurst, Watauga, Haltom City, Keller, and Southlake. Licensed Texas irrigator. $0 service call fee. $75 per hour labor only. No dispatch, no upsell, no surprise invoices.
Sprinkler repair in North Richland Hills from Spray Irrigation Co. costs $75 per hour for labor plus parts (quoted before installation), with a $0 service call fee. Most common repairs — broken heads, failed valves, controller issues — take 30–90 minutes and total $100–$250.
Click the symptom that best matches what you're seeing. Landon will show you the most likely causes, what a fix typically costs, and how long it usually takes.
Select a symptom above to see likely causes and cost estimates
⚠ Diagnostic guide only · Every system is different · Final diagnosis requires an on-site visit (which is free — $0 service call)
None of this is required — you can call right now and Landon will figure it out when he gets there. But running through these 6 checks will either solve the problem for free, or let Landon diagnose it before he even leaves his driveway. Your time and money both come out ahead.
Walk to wherever your irrigation system ties into the water supply — usually a backflow preventer (a brass fixture with two ball valves on top, typically near the house or in a green box by the meter). Both handles should be parallel to the pipe to be open. If either one is perpendicular (sideways), the water is shut off to the system. This single check explains a surprising number of "nothing is working" calls — often after a freeze, a plumber visit, or yard work when someone closed the valve and forgot.
Takes: 30 seconds · Fixes: About 1 in 8 "no water" calls
Find your sprinkler controller (usually in the garage, sometimes in a utility closet or on an exterior wall). Look at the display and take a photo with your phone. A blank display means no power. An error code is the controller telling you exactly what it thinks is wrong. "RAIN DELAY" or "OFF" on the screen means the system is intentionally paused. If it shows the normal time and looks healthy, the problem is downstream of the controller — a valve, wire, or head — which narrows things significantly.
Takes: 1 minute · Pro tip: Text the photo to (817) 993-9306 — Landon reads controller displays every day
If the controller display is completely blank, your first suspect is a tripped GFCI (ground-fault) outlet. These are the outlets with the little RESET and TEST buttons, usually in bathrooms, kitchens, garages, and on exterior walls. One tripped GFCI can kill power to a whole chain of outlets — including the one feeding your sprinkler controller. Press RESET on every GFCI outlet in the house, then check if the controller display comes back. If it does, you just fixed the problem yourself.
Takes: 2 minutes · Fixes: A real number of "dead controller" calls — no charge, no visit
Most controllers have a MANUAL button. Use it to run each zone for about 2 minutes while you walk the yard and watch. You're looking for: zones that don't turn on at all; zones where the pressure is clearly weaker than others; broken heads geysering or stuck down; heads spraying the street, the fence, or nothing. Write down which zone numbers have which problems (or take a video). This zone-by-zone map is the single most useful piece of information you can give an irrigator before a visit — it turns a 60-minute diagnosis into a 10-minute confirmation.
Takes: 5–10 minutes · Makes: The repair visit dramatically faster
With the controller set to OFF (or unplugged), walk the yard and listen near each sprinkler valve box. If you hear water running, one of the valves is stuck open and you have a slow leak that's been feeding one zone continuously — almost certainly for days or weeks. This is the #1 cause of sudden water bill spikes on homes with irrigation systems. You can also confirm it by reading your water meter: with everything in the house off, the low-flow indicator on the meter (a small triangle or gear) should be completely still. If it's moving, water is leaking somewhere. Shut the irrigation supply valve off (Step 01 in reverse), and if the meter stops, you've isolated the leak to the sprinkler system.
Takes: 5 minutes · Saves: Could save hundreds on next water bill if caught early
Once you've run through the checks above, text Landon a couple of photos and a quick summary of what you found. Something like: "Zone 4 wont come on, controller says OK, heard nothing at the valve box. Here's the controller, here's the head that used to spray that area."
Landon will usually reply within a couple of hours during business days with a likely diagnosis and a rough cost estimate. If it's something you can solve yourself, he'll tell you how and not charge a dime. If it needs a visit, he can come prepared with the right parts — which means the actual repair visit is faster and cheaper. And if it's an active emergency, he'll bump you up the schedule.
The whole checklist takes: About 10 minutes · The payoff: Either a free fix or a faster, cheaper visit
If it runs underground and sprays water, Landon has fixed it before — many times. Below are the twelve repairs that make up roughly 90% of every call. Your system is probably one of these.
Cracked pop-up bodies, snapped risers, missing caps — usually from lawn equipment or vehicles. The #1 most common repair.
The electrical coil inside the valve fails. The zone either won't turn on, or refuses to turn off and runs continuously.
Sand, scale, or grit blocks the nozzle. Spray pattern becomes uneven or stops entirely. Quick fix, big impact on coverage.
Ground shift after winter freeze, root pressure, or install stress. Shows up as a geyser or a mystery wet spot. Common March–May.
Controller-to-valve wire cut by a shovel, chewed by rodents, or corroded at a splice. A single wire break can kill one zone or all of them.
Power surges, lightning strikes, failed station outputs, corrupted programs. Replacement or reprogramming depending on diagnosis.
Too-high pressure misting nozzles to fog; too-low pressure starving the far end of zones. Fix improves efficiency dramatically.
Cracked bonnets, bad poppets, failed test ports. Required by code in most North Texas cities. Landon handles both repair and testing.
Stuck arcs, nozzle pop-out failures, worn gear trains. Usually cheaper to replace than repair, but Landon will tell you which.
Stuck sensors that skip watering after a rain (or worse, during a drought). Texas requires them on new installs.
The plastic manifold that bundles multiple valves together cracks over time. Often mistaken for a pipe leak. Specific repair technique.
Post-winter inspection and repair of anything that cracked during a hard freeze. Common in North Texas after every serious cold snap.
From the first phone call to the moment Landon's truck pulls out of your driveway, here's exactly what happens — and what you pay for each step.
(817) 993-9306 rings Landon's personal phone. Describe the problem or text a photo — he'll usually tell you what's likely wrong on the spot.
Most non-emergency repairs are scheduled within 1–3 business days. Emergencies get same-day or next-day priority when possible.
Landon arrives, diagnoses the problem, and quotes you a specific price in writing — parts, labor, total. You approve before anything is touched.
The repair happens, the zone is tested, the area is cleaned up. You pay only for the time worked at $75/hr plus approved parts — nothing else.
The service-call fee is the single biggest difference between Spray Irrigation Co. and most competitors in the North Fort Worth market. This isn't marketing — it's the actual billing model.
Sprinkler repair from Spray Irrigation Co. costs $75 per hour for labor, plus parts quoted before installation, with a $0 service call fee. Most single-problem repairs take 30 to 90 minutes and total between $100 and $250. Complex diagnostics or underground pipe repairs can run higher, but every part and every hour is quoted before any work begins. Compare to the North Fort Worth industry standard of $75–$150 just for the trip before anything else.
In the North Fort Worth clay-soil corridor, the most common repairs are: stuck valve solenoids (which cause zones to run continuously and spike water bills), broken or cracked sprinkler heads from lawn equipment damage, clogged rotor nozzles from sediment, wire breaks from root growth or digging, and failed controllers after summer power surges or lightning. Cracked PVC pipes also spike in March and April as the ground shifts after winter.
Yes. Landon repairs sprinkler systems regardless of who installed them originally — Hunter, Rain Bird, Toro, Rachio, K-Rain, Irritrol, or any other manufacturer. If the system has been neglected or was poorly installed, he'll give you an honest assessment of what needs to be fixed now and what can wait. There's no penalty or surcharge for working on systems installed by other companies.
Most non-emergency repairs in North Richland Hills can be scheduled within 1 to 3 business days. Active emergencies — a geysering pipe, a zone flooding the yard, a completely dead system during a July heat wave — get same-day or next-day priority. Wet Check maintenance subscribers always get priority scheduling ahead of non-subscribers.
Yes. Texas law (Texas Administrative Code §344.33) requires anyone working on an irrigation system that connects to a public water supply to hold a valid irrigator or irrigation technician license from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Unlicensed "handyman" sprinkler repair is both illegal and uninsured — if something goes wrong, you have no recourse. Landon holds a current TCEQ license and carries full general liability insurance.
A broken head shows symptoms only when that zone is actively running — a geyser, a fan of water where it shouldn't be, or a dry spot where the head used to spray. A leaking valve usually shows a wet spot or running water when the zone is supposed to be off, and is the single most common cause of sudden water bill spikes. The diagnostic wizard above helps you tell them apart, or text a photo to (817) 993-9306 and Landon will call it immediately.
(817) 993-9306 is Landon's personal number. He answers himself. $0 to come out, $75/hr for labor, and an honest quote before anything is touched. That's the whole model.