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Best Rain Sensor for Hunter and Rain Bird Sprinkler Systems

Best rain sensor for Hunter and Rain Bird sprinkler systems

A rain sensor pauses a controller's scheduled runs once enough rain has fallen to satisfy the lawn. The result is lower water bills, less runoff onto sidewalks, and fewer wasted cycles on a wet zone. Most modern residential installs are required by local code to have one: Florida, New Jersey, and Minnesota mandate them statewide on new automatic systems; Texas requires them on new installs and most replacements (per TCEQ Rule 30 TAC §344.62); California and several Atlanta-metro counties impose similar rules. Even outside those jurisdictions, the EPA WaterSense program recommends rain sensors on every automatic irrigation system as a baseline efficiency measure.

Four canonical residential sensors anchor this comparison: Hunter Mini-Clik, Hunter Wireless Solar Sync, Rain Bird RSD-Bex, and Rain Bird WR2, plus freeze-sensor variants and a few cross-brand picks. Wired vs wireless tradeoffs, controller compatibility, and a clean install procedure follow.

Wired vs wireless: which path fits your install

Both kinds work; the choice is about how much cable you want to pull and how much battery upkeep you're willing to do.

Wired

Cheaper (typical $40–$65 for the sensor itself), and there's nothing to maintain once installed. The sensor sits in open sky at the install site, and a two-conductor cable runs back to the controller's sensor terminals. The downside is the wire run. If the open-sky mount is on the far side of the house from the controller, that can mean 60+ feet of UF-rated direct-burial cable through soffit, attic, or under a deck. Wired sensors are normally-closed dry-contact switches, which means almost every controller on the market accepts them; cross-brand wiring is the rule, not the exception.

Wireless

No long cable run, which makes wireless the right call when the only viable open-sky location is on a detached structure (garage, shed, gable on the opposite side from the controller). The transmitter sits at the sensor, sends a low-power radio signal to a receiver wired to the controller's sensor terminals, and runs on a lithium battery the manufacturer rates for 5+ years. The tradeoffs are upfront cost (typical $120–$220), a pairing step at install, and the periodic battery swap. Hunter's Wireless Solar Sync transmits ET data along with rain status, so its receiver also feeds a smarter weekly seasonal adjust to the controller; the Rain Bird WR2 transmits rain and freeze status only.

Hunter Mini-Clik / Solar Sync vs Rain Bird RSD-Bex / WR2

The four sensors most commonly named on residential install drawings. Specs cited from Hunter's MINI-CLIK, WSS, and Wireless Rain/Freeze data sheets and Rain Bird's RSD and WR2 product sheets.

Model Brand Wired / wireless Adjustable rain threshold Freeze sensor Controller compatibility List price
Hunter Mini-Clik (HUN-58-0013) Hunter Wired 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Hunter data sheet) No (pair with Freeze-Clik) Any normally-closed sensor input (all Hunter, Rain Bird, K-Rain, Irritrol residential) ~$43
Hunter Rain-Clik QRS (HUN-58-1084) Hunter Wired Factory-preset 1/8" (Quick Response disc — interrupts an in-progress run within minutes per Hunter) No Any normally-closed sensor input ~$50
Hunter Wireless Solar Sync WSS-SEN (HUN-58-1465) Hunter Wireless N/A — uses solar radiation, temperature, and rain data to compute ET-driven daily adjustment (per Hunter Solar Sync product page) Yes (built-in freeze sensor) Solar Sync–capable Hunter controllers (Pro-C, Pro-HC, HCC, I-Core, ACC2 among others; see Hunter's Solar Sync compatibility chart) ~$224
Hunter Wireless Rain/Freeze (HUN-58-0050) Hunter Wireless 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Hunter Wireless Rain/Freeze data sheet) Yes (built-in freeze) Any normally-closed sensor input (the receiver wires to standard SEN terminals) ~$123
Rain Bird RSD-Bex (RBD-58-1565) Rain Bird Wired 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Rain Bird RSD product page) No Any normally-closed sensor input ~$42
Rain Bird WR2 WR2RFC (RBD-58-1994) Rain Bird Wireless 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Rain Bird WR2 product page) Yes (built-in freeze, 32°F) Any normally-closed sensor input (the receiver wires to standard SEN terminals) ~$125
Rain Bird WR2RFC-48 (RBD-58-0001) Rain Bird Wireless 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" plus selectable 48-hour rain-hold after dry-out (per Rain Bird WR2RFC-48 product page) Yes (built-in freeze, 32°F) Any normally-closed sensor input ~$125

If you want the simplest reliable answer for a Hunter system, the Mini-Clik on a Hunter controller is the install pros' default. For a Rain Bird system on the same logic, the RSD-Bex is the equivalent default. For wireless on either brand, the WR2RFC gets you rain plus freeze in one transmitter; the WR2RFC-48 adds a 48-hour rain hold for climates where the lawn stays wet a day or two after a storm clears.

Will it work with my controller?

Short answer: almost certainly, regardless of brand. Long answer: there are two layers of compatibility.

Brand-native pairings (always work, drop-in)

  • Hunter controllers + Hunter sensors: X-Core, Pro-C, Pro-HC, X2, HCC, and I-Core all accept any of the Hunter Mini-Clik / Rain-Clik / Freeze-Clik / Wireless Rain/Freeze line via the SEN terminals. The Wireless Solar Sync (WSS-SEN) is a separate compatibility story: it pairs with the Pro-C, Pro-HC, HCC, I-Core, and ACC2 among others. Check Hunter's Solar Sync compatibility chart for your specific model before ordering.
  • Rain Bird controllers + Rain Bird sensors: ESP-Me, ESP-TM2, ESP-RZXe, and ESP-Me3 all accept the RSD-Bex (wired) and WR2 (wireless) on the SEN terminals.

Cross-brand pairings (work as a dry-contact switch)

Every sensor named above is a normally-closed dry-contact switch: rain opens the contact, dry closes it. That means any controller with a sensor input (almost all residential controllers built in the last 20 years) accepts any of these sensors regardless of brand. A Rain Bird RSD-Bex works on a Hunter X-Core; a Hunter Mini-Clik works on a Rain Bird ESP-Me. Wire the two conductors to the controller's SEN1 and SEN2 terminals, flip the sensor switch to "Active," and the bypass switch handles override during testing.

The one exception: Hunter's Wireless Solar Sync (WSS-SEN) isn't a dry-contact sensor — it's an ET data feed into Hunter's Solar Sync seasonal-adjust system, and it only works with a Solar Sync–capable Hunter controller. Don't try to pair it with a Rain Bird ESP-TM2; the protocol isn't shared.

Install in four steps

  1. Pick the mount location. Open sky exposure (no overhang, gutter, or tree canopy above), out of the spray pattern of any head, and on a gable or fascia where the disc faces up so rain reaches it. The discs are hygroscopic: they swell when wet to open the contact, so a sheltered mount means a sensor that never trips. South or east-facing surfaces dry out faster after a storm, which is the behavior you want.
  2. Mount the sensor + run the wire. The included bracket bolts to fascia, soffit, or gutter; the dish should sit clear of the mounting surface. For wired sensors, run two-conductor UF-rated 18 AWG direct-burial sensor cable back to the controller, through soffit or attic where possible to avoid an exposed run. Wireless saves this step; mount the transmitter and place its receiver near the controller within the manufacturer's rated range (Hunter and Rain Bird both rate residential transmitters to 800+ feet line-of-sight).
  3. Wire the controller. Most residential controllers terminate the two sensor conductors at terminals labeled SEN1 and SEN2 (or just SENSOR; check your model's wiring diagram). On Hunter X-Core / Pro-C: remove the bypass jumper between the SEN terminals before wiring the sensor. On Rain Bird ESP-Me / ESP-TM2: same. The jumper is what completes the circuit when no sensor is installed; leave it in and the sensor input does nothing.
  4. Test with the bypass switch. Every Hunter and Rain Bird controller has a sensor bypass switch on the face. Flip the sensor to "Active," run a manual cycle from the controller, then press and hold the test button on the sensor itself (it forces the disc-side contact open) and confirm the controller pauses. Flip the bypass to "Bypass" and confirm the controller ignores the sensor — useful when you need to run a system test in the rain.