no problem! they are both great pumps, just some people might like one over the other because of what i mentioned! ive bought 4 ryobis and 3 milwuakees and loved them 😃👍 glad you found it helpful. let me know if you have any questions on them
I'm trying to find something for my parent who have an obsession with saving rain water. Ryobi's slow output is great for watering the plants, but problem is when the pump goes dry it doesn't stop automatically. From what I hear Milwaukee has a sensor that automatically stop it when it runs dry, but it pumps too fast. Tough choice.......but for the automatic sensor, it might be worth it, I don't want to have to keep buying a machine because my 80 year old parents are too slow to turn off the switch. lol.
Where are you getting your water to fill those tanks..?? Well water , city utitly or somewhere else ? How much do you pay to fill those tanks and where ? Thanks for information, i am buying land in lancaster soon...
i fill them up with rain water mainly, i can catch like 15k gallons with my small roofs. i also catch some at my home and at my brothers home and move it in my truck to my farm. you can drill a decent well for like 35k and city water hookups are around 30-80k depending where it is in lancaster. i like lan aster because u can get rainwater, make a well easily, and the city has good water supply so theyll sell you some. i think a good farm in lancaster should eventually have all 3 but for now the rain is free. you can fill up 10 of those tanks(3k gals) for 300 from a water delivery truck too. pretty cheap
@@alphathefirstone1222 it’s doesn’t rain often, but when it does it’s a lot. If you have the money the well is the best option, followed by rain capture 2nd, and city water 3rd and trucked water 4th
they work good for a few hundred feet of drip line. i get good pressure up to 300' on flat area. i use big pumps to turn whole farm on at same time now but these are great until you set up more permanent irrigation
You are right. Milwuakee and ryobi both made by TTI from HK. Kinda weird tho ryobi has better features lol ryobi as a brand definitley is more affordable though. This milwuakee pump seems way sturdier.
Great review and comparison video! Truly helping me make a decision for irrigating off-grid garden - Thank you!
no problem! they are both great pumps, just some people might like one over the other because of what i mentioned! ive bought 4 ryobis and 3 milwuakees and loved them 😃👍 glad you found it helpful. let me know if you have any questions on them
I'm trying to find something for my parent who have an obsession with saving rain water. Ryobi's slow output is great for watering the plants, but problem is when the pump goes dry it doesn't stop automatically. From what I hear Milwaukee has a sensor that automatically stop it when it runs dry, but it pumps too fast. Tough choice.......but for the automatic sensor, it might be worth it, I don't want to have to keep buying a machine because my 80 year old parents are too slow to turn off the switch. lol.
the ryobi sometimes goes on sale for $99 and the milwuakee is 199. that might influence the decision too if u find it on sale
Just curious, is one louder than the other?
They are about the same in loudness but the ryobi is a very annoying sound if I’m being honest lol 😂
Where are you getting your water to fill those tanks..?? Well water , city utitly or somewhere else ? How much do you pay to fill those tanks and where ? Thanks for information, i am buying land in lancaster soon...
i fill them up with rain water mainly, i can catch like 15k gallons with my small roofs. i also catch some at my home and at my brothers home and move it in my truck to my farm. you can drill a decent well for like 35k and city water hookups are around 30-80k depending where it is in lancaster. i like lan aster because u can get rainwater, make a well easily, and the city has good water supply so theyll sell you some. i think a good farm in lancaster should eventually have all 3 but for now the rain is free. you can fill up 10 of those tanks(3k gals) for 300 from a water delivery truck too. pretty cheap
@@alphathefirstone1222 it’s doesn’t rain often, but when it does it’s a lot. If you have the money the well is the best option, followed by rain capture 2nd, and city water 3rd and trucked water 4th
kern and north east la county is chill with that stuff. theres like 5b worth of illegal grows here and 50k illegal homes 😂
Hey man did you figure out how to put it on a timer to water your plants?
yeah i just attached a timer that turns it on at a certain time lol . leave it on and the timer turns the plug on so it starts up.
@@AgaveroCaliforniano ok so that only works with the Ryobi one then and not the Milwaukee?
both, they are pretty much the same pump
@@AgaveroCaliforniano cool thanks man I'm gonna try it out on my permaculture farm I will buy the Milwaukee one.
they work good for a few hundred feet of drip line. i get good pressure up to 300' on flat area. i use big pumps to turn whole farm on at same time now but these are great until you set up more permanent irrigation
Is one more powerful?
I think the Milwaukee might be slightly more in power but the difference is very small
Dude I think Milwaukee owns Ryobi, that's their "more affordable" sub branding.
You are right. Milwuakee and ryobi both made by TTI from HK. Kinda weird tho ryobi has better features lol ryobi as a brand definitley is more affordable though. This milwuakee pump seems way sturdier.
?use it
I use it in other videos
you made an 11-minute video but didn't demonstrate there pumping ability? really?
Buy one and find out 🤷♂️, ty for watching lol.