Drip Tape

Drip tape is a type of thin walled dripperline used in drip irrigation. The first drip tape, a product known as "Dew Hose", was developed in Watertown, New York, in the 1960s by Richard D. Chapin of Chapin Watermatics in the United States.

Drip tape is made of polyethylene and is sold flat, on reels containing several thousand feet. The wall thickness typically ranges from 4 to 25 mils (0.1–0.6 mm). Thicker walled tapes are commonly used for permanent subsurface drip irrigation and thinner walled tapes for temporary throw-away type systems in high value crops. Water exits the tape through emitters / drippers. Typical emitter spacing ranges from 6 to 24 inches (150–600 mm). In some products, the emitters are manufactured simultaneously with the tape and are actually formed as part of the product itself. In others, the emitters are manufactured separately and installed at the time of production. Some of these manufacturers claim that their product is not a tape, but a thin walled dripperline, but in popular parlance, both types of products are called tapes. Typical tape diameters are 5/8", 7/8", and 1-3/8", with the larger diameters more commonly used on permanent installations with longer runs.

Drip tape is a recyclable material and can be recycled into viable plastic resins for reuse in the plastics manufacturing industry.

Notable manufacturers of drip tape include:

  • Grupo Chamartin (Spain)
  • Aquarius Brands, Inc (U.S.)
  • Chapin Watermatics (New York, U.S.)
  • Eurodrip
  • Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd. (India, U.S., UK, South Africa)
  • Netafim Irrigation (Israel, U.S.)
  • Plastro Irrigation Systems (Israel)
  • Roberts Irrigation (California, U.S.)
  • T-Systems International (California, U.S.)
  • Toro Ag (California, U.S.)
  • Valplastic USA (California, U.S.)

Famous quotes containing the words drip and/or tape:

    This is the weather the shepherd shuns,
    And so do I;
    When beeches drip in browns and duns,
    And thresh, and ply;
    Thomas Hardy (1840–1928)

    We shall see but little way if we require to understand what we see. How few things can a man measure with the tape of his understanding! How many greater things might he be seeing in the meanwhile!
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)