Hunter's MP Rotator nozzles screw onto a standard spray body and replace fixed-pattern fan nozzles with multi-stream, rotating water delivery. That design drove the matched-precipitation revolution in residential and commercial irrigation. Out of the box every MP Rotator is preset to its center arc (often 180°) and full radius. Almost every install needs at least an arc adjustment; many need a radius dial-back too.
This guide walks the adjustment process for the four current MP families (MP800SR, MP1000, MP2000, MP3000) plus the MP Corner nozzle, using Hunter's official adjustment tool.
If you're shopping for the nozzles themselves, browse the full lineup on the Rotary Nozzles category page; every in-stock MP Rotator on Total Sprinkler is listed there.
Set arc first, radius last.
The MP Rotator has three independent adjustments and the order matters. Doing it backwards means re-doing it.
Hold the nozzle's outer ring (the part with the printed arc markings) and rotate it until the left edge of the spray hits where you want the left boundary of the watered area. That side is now fixed. Then turn the inner adjustment ring with the forked end of the adjustment tool (clockwise to widen the arc, counter-clockwise to narrow it) until the right edge of the spray hits the right boundary.
The arc range depends on the model:
Stand behind the nozzle and watch which way the streams sweep. If you need the opposite direction, you'll need to swap to the matched left-rotation MP nozzle. Hunter manufactures most arcs in both rotations, and Total Sprinkler stocks both rotation variants; see the Rotary Nozzles category for the full list.
Insert the key end of the adjustment tool into the small port on top of the nozzle (look for the slot marked with a flat-head screwdriver symbol). Turn clockwise to reduce the radius (up to about 25% pullback from full); counter-clockwise to restore full radius. The MP Rotator family is engineered so that radius reduction preserves matched precipitation — you can dial down a 30' nozzle to 24' without creating dry spots. Don't push beyond the documented 25% reduction; past that point precipitation uniformity degrades and you'll get dry strips.
Pressure matters: pair with PRS40, not PRS30.
The MP Rotator design point is 40 PSI dynamic at the nozzle; the full operating range is 30–55 PSI. PRS40 spray bodies regulate to 40 PSI, which is why PRS40 + MP Rotator is the canonical pairing, and Hunter built the PRS40 specifically for the MP Rotator.
PRS30 bodies regulate to 30 PSI, the low end of the MP Rotator's operating range; reserve PRS30 for the MP800SR family at its 6' minimum radius. For all other MP Rotator zones, use a PRS40 spray body. For the full PRS30 vs PRS40 decision tree, see our PRS30 vs PRS40 comparison guide.
Five MP Rotator nozzle families cover the residential and light-commercial range. Pick by the radius your zone needs:
| Family | Radius (ft) | Arc | Best for | Example SKU |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP800SR (short-radius) | 6'–12' | 90°–210° or 360° | Tight strips, narrow side yards, mixed-head fix-up | HUN-58-1553 90°–210° female thread |
| MP1000 | 10'–12' (extended to 15') | 90°–210° or 360° | Standard small residential zones | HUN-58-0015 10–12' female thread |
| MP2000 | 13'–21' | 90°–210° or 360° | Most mid-sized residential zones | HUN-58-1204 MP2000 male thread |
| MP3000 | 22'–30' | 90°–210° or 360° | Large lawns, light commercial | HUN-58-0017 16–20' female, plus 360° variants |
| MP Corner | 8'–15' | 45°–105° | Tight corners where a wider arc would overspray hardscape | HUN-58-1212 |
All in-stock MP Rotators on Total Sprinkler are on the Rotary Nozzles category page. If you don't see the rotation, arc, or radius you need, contact us. We stock the male-thread and 360° variants behind the most common SKUs.
If you're tuning up the rest of your system: