Watering my flock

Here is the waterer on the coop.

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I had to build a removeable triangle of wood so I can keep the "J" upright when I am replacing a full waterer. The green triangle of wood is held in place by a very high tech device known as two screws and a piece of wire.

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Remove the pipe and lay it so and use a garden hose to fill. When you stand the "J" back up it will glug, glug, glug for a bit and no water will spill out. The cap and elbows must be airtight to allow the vacuum to form. I recommend glueing them together.

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Replace the pipe and the triangle wood. The pipe is held in place by two screws and wire. I just wrap the wire around one screw to hold it. I got tired of spending $30 on wood and $40 on hardware. It's not pretty but the chicken waterer fashion police have yet to issue me a ticket.

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On the inside of a real coop You could set the bottom of the waterer on the floor and bungee it to the wall. I would guess that this 4' long 3" diameter pipe would hold about 1 1/2 gallons. Larger or longer pipe would hold more. I got the idea from this forum.

I hope this helps a bit.
 
I made the pvc waterer yesterday, let it dry and filled it this a.m. I attached it with bungees to one of the fenceposts in the run. It works beautifully!!
I already had 3" pvc and the fittings cost about $10 at Lowes.
Thanks, codybird!
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Thanks New Adventure. Mine is still working fine. I change the water every 4 or 5 days just because. I been sloshing a dilute solution of clorox water into the pipe when I change the water since you can't clean up into the pipe. I was thinking of adding a bit of ACV to the water to preclude nastiness potential.

RH, You are probably right. I didn't want to over estimate. I will calculate how much it does hold today because it would be good to know for sure. Like 1 foot = X gals.

My BSL's are 6 weeks today.
 
RH,

Oddly enough, it comes out to 1.47 gals. 3 pints per foot.

volume of cylinder = pi (3.14) x r (1.5)squared x Height.

V = 3.14 x 2.25 x 48 = 340 cubic inches.

I would have thought it would be more too.

You never know til you "math" it.
 
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I don't have a picture, but I can get one if you really need it.

It is a simple thing I fashioned for my 2-month-old chicks. I took a quart tub that once held potato salad. It is about 7 inches tall. Right at the bottom I used a hold drill to put 3 one-inch holes on the sides. I sat the tub on the lid of a gallon ice cream bucket and screwed down through the tub and lid onto a piece of plywood for weight and stability. Done.
 

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