DIY Ride-on Yard Irrigation Trencher

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Published 2021-09-18
A neat way to cut a trench that needs no backfill. Since the dirt is just pushed aside by the knife, the trench closes by itself (heals) in a few weeks, leaving no evidence, other than the new sprinklers.

All Comments (19)
  • @rockyhill3
    I love to see ingenious projects like these, amazing!
  • Awesome, why so few views on such a great idea! btw I "untrenched" a power line doing similiar thing, winch hooked to truck and pulled out the cable. Slow but works, no digging, use pressure washer to loosen dirt as it went.
  • The idea is certainly not new, but to make one for your own garden is really rather clever. I like it.
  • @Patriottoo2
    I made this DIY ride-on trencher to install poly pipe for underground sprinklers. It will cut a trench 8-12" deep. Then the sled is turned around and the pipe is pulled to the depth of the trench. The sled is steered by weight shift on the "wings." I like to re-appropriate materials for projects... the sled base was picked out of a trash bin at a local welding shop. It had held a receiver hitch, which had been removed. I had to add "ailerons" to accommodate my size 13 feet. The handle was picked from a pile of exercise equipment that the high school had thrown away after getting a grant for a new weight room. The leverage provided by the long handle allows the knife to, easily, break though small tree roots. The winch cable is attached to a tree, or to a hand crank winch, inserted into a vehicle's receiver hitch. ATV winch is from Harbor Freight. Since this method provides for insertion of the poly pipe by pulling it to depth after the knife has cut the narrow trench, there is very minimal digging, except for near the sprinkler heads. Almost a year later, the narrow cut trench has "healed" without leaving a trace... except for the working sprinklers.
  • @rich.trails
    What are you anchored to? Seems like it should do okay for straight runs. Just beware of the short duty cycle if you are pulling a significant amp load.
  • @ng4410
    Needs a harley badge. wildest invention on ytube. like it....
  • @theMekanik
    Dude is a Fkn Genius!!!! đŸ€˜đŸ»đŸ˜ŽđŸ€˜đŸ»
  • @workaholic5066
    I like your design. But it will only work in wet sediment based soil like in Louisiana or very soft wet clays. The winch idea is genius though!!
  • @BS-Fact-checker
    The amount of time and effort put into this machine it would have been quicker to dig it by hand.
  • @jrm163
    Novel idea but it’s dangerous! The steel cord can hurt you if it’s broken.
  • @Patriottoo2
    I was trolled, yesterday, by someone calling himself, "BS-Fact-checker." He, apparently, decided that he would attempt to put me down (and, assume superiority) by posting something to the effect that I could have saved a lot of time by digging the trench by hand, instead of spending time, making my sled trencher. It was obvious that he thought I was stupid to have put so much time into building my trencher. When I countered with a logical argument, as to why I made the trencher, he decided to run and hide... and, deleted his post. He is just one example of how some people are incapable of thinking things through before posting comments. As I tried to explain to him, I was not in a hurry to place underground piping for my irrigation. I, eagerly, spent my time, fabricating the sled, as proof-of-concept to learn, if such a contrivance could be used to trench and lay pipe, easier than digging. The results were better than what I had foreseen. I spent no time digging, and did not have to back-fill the trenches after laying pipe... since the dirt was just pushed aside by the knife, the narrow trench filled back in on its own (the cut healed by itself). I was so elated by the results of using the sled, I, actually, was high for a few days after the first use.
  • @villijs33321
    Well the Idea is old as the first winch, people in EU for many decades doing smal garden work with winches in sted of horses. pulling plows, seeders, trenchers, snow sleds, firewood, logs...
  • @Patriottoo2
    BS-Fact-checker's comment makes no sense. His comment defies logic. I've, always, hated to dig, and at my advanced age digging is a real pain. Plus, I love to invent and fabricate stuff, so the project was satisfying to me. Plus, once the time building, and proving the success of the sled, any use of the machine is just gravy... no more digging. Following his logic, few things would ever be developed. Consider for example, a chainsaw... how many trees could have been fallen by a handsaw, while the chainsaw was being developed? Geeeesh! Perhaps, he can go troll somewhere else.