Guys -
Thanks for the info, but I have not gotten the answer I was looking for. Let me re-phrase the question - when installing the piping of a drainage system on a green with sizable and appreciable slopes/contours (such as the ones at AGNC), how do you deal with getting the pipes to move from one level to another? Are angled joints or flexible tubing used?
DT
David the simple answer to your question is the slopes/contours don't matter to the drainage. The pipes have to drain, so are installed with a fall, they can't drain if they follow the contours up and down! The subair (as mentioned) blows through the drainage system and works best with a gravel layer to 'disperse' the air, so again the position of pipe doesn't really matter. Remember also that in a properly built USGA spec green the subsoil, gravel layer, choker layer (if it's included) and the final surface should all have the same contours to ensure it performs properly but the drainage pipe is installed underneath at whatever depth it needs to be to provide positive flow.
As for adding the system into an existing green, it all depends on the greens construction. If it's a properly built USGA spec green with internal drainage then you can hook it up to the existing drainage either with a portable unit or if you have the money by adding a permanent unit. As for an old push-up green I'm sure you would possibly get some benefit with a
modified profile with XGD/TDI type drainage (but as Mark said, I can see its limitations as the tightness of the soil would restrict airflow) so ideally if you really wanted subair, in this senario the green would have to be rebuilt to USGA specs and have it added at that time.