For any field manager and their crew, laying out and painting sports field lines is a time-consuming process, requiring hours of manual stringing and lining and numerous crew members to pull off. Even with the most skilled and experienced crews, manual field layout leaves ample room for human error. For those maintaining fields for a school, park district, or club team, wonky lines can leave a less-than-desired impression on athletes and spectators alike.
When it comes to mowing, seeding, and aerating fields, along with other duties, new technologies have made these jobs faster and more efficient. Yet sports field line painting has been slower to evolve. As a result, crews are still spending untold hours painting fields more often than they should, scrambling to meet the demands of their busiest seasons, and falling forever behind those higher-level tasks that take their fields and facilities to the next level.
To save time and resources, a field manager can deploy a robot like the TinyMobileRobots and focus on the many other tasks involved in preparing a sports field for play. Complex arcs and lines can be painted with great accuracy and minimal supervision, freeing up managers’ time for other important aspects of field maintenance. Solutions like sports field line painting robots are especially useful for grounds crews responsible for multiple fields or multiple sports layouts per season. Automation and readily available templates enable the robot to mark accurately, saving labor hours for other essential field maintenance and saving paint for the future.
There’s no doubt that sports field line painting is a difficult task that requires thoughtful planning and a deeply specific skill set. In comparison to other tasks, sports field line painting comes with its own unique challenges.
Laying out and painting field lines on fresh, unmarked turf is the most difficult and labor-intensive aspect of sports field line painting.
The challenge comes when crews must paint several fields in a short period of time. For example, when spring comes around, crews must lay out and paint field lines to prepare for the spring season long after the previous season’s lines have been washed away. As summer winds down, crews must remove the field lines for spring sports and layout lines for fall sports.
Special events like tournaments and youth camps can have crews working from sun-up to sun-down for weeks as they lay out and paint field after field, sometimes dozens. After the tournament is over, they may have to remove and re-paint the original fields that were there before.
Differences in field dimensions among variations of the same sport can get quite granular. For example, the official rules and dimensions of an NFL FLAG football field differ from a traditional American football field, with different widths and end zones. Women’s lacrosse fields feature arched lines mirrored on each side of the layout, demanding exact measurements and symmetry, while men’s lacrosse fields lack these features.
Then there are other challenges, like scaling a regulation field down for kids’ competition or small-sided play. Sometimes, fields must be sized to fit a particular space.
Crews must map out these dimensions and execute them, which takes a substantial amount of planning and calculation. After all, field dimensions come with high stakes, especially in high school and collegiate sports, where an irregular field can result in penalties for the hosting organization.
The quality of the field reflects the quality of the organization, whether it be a parks and rec department, a high school athletics department, a club team, or a collegiate campus rec or club sports program. Creating an elite atmosphere relies on surgically accurate lines and extra details like endzone lettering and sponsorship logos.
Yet when pulling an entire soccer field sideline, it’s almost impossible for a crew member to achieve a perfect line by hand. Even using a stencil, manually painting dozens of hash marks on a football field invites plenty of human error.
High-quality fields directly correlate with business value. The look and feel of an organization’s facilities can make a difference when it comes to recruiting athletes, landing sponsors, and drawing more activities to the park or school.
Meeting these challenges is difficult when performed manually and can run crews ragged. By overcoming these manual pain points, sports field line painting no longer sucks away hours and money from your teams and budget.
Sports field line painting simply takes too many people and too much time.
Laying out a single field can take three people or more. Every organization, whether it be a professional turf crew, a school grounds crew, or a parks and recreation crew, feels like there aren’t enough hours in the day to meet all their responsibilities. Plus, they are burned out. This is why crews face so much turnover and struggle amid a labor shortage.
If crews could free themselves from being so inundated with painting fields, they could actually get to other tasks that would improve the facilities and enjoy a better quality of life.
Painting field lines isn’t something you can just figure out as you go along. The crew members leading the charge often have a well-honed process they’ve developed over years of practice.
Reliance on this specialized skillset puts even more of a squeeze on crews. When one of these field painting pros retires, replacing them can be a nightmare. With so many fields to paint, these pros are in high demand — so much so that organizations sometimes spend thousands on third-party vendors to come in and paint the initial field layout.
If sports field line painting were easier, organizations would have more flexibility in distributing this workload. Even volunteers, interns, and new hires could help lessen the load.
The initial field layout is so much work that crews spend inordinate time and expense repainting fields just to keep from losing those original lines.
They must paint:
One TinyMobileRobots client spent weeks painting fields in preparation for a tournament, and by the time they’d laid out the final fields, several of the earlier fields needed to be repainted already.
Of course, each repaint becomes a copy of a copy of a copy of the original field. That is, the quality of the field will deteriorate with each round of manual painting.
How much paint, time, and manpower could an organization save if they didn’t have to repaint field lines needlessly? How much more could they get done, and how much more value could they drive for the organization?
To date, innovations in sports field line painting have failed to solve these pain points.
Laser-based line marking systems and rolling push painters only alleviate a fraction of the manual work and the likelihood of human error. Field painting robots have required complicated base stations to set up and run with each round of painting.
But GPS-powered field painting robots may be the game-changer that crews and organizations have been waiting for.
These machines are so easy to use that anyone can use them, and it only takes about 10- 15 minutes to train a new user to operate them successfully. Organizations using field painting robots no longer have to paint lines just to keep from losing the original layout. Their crews have hours back each day that they can spend on other tasks like weed eating, aerating, picking up trash, and more. Instead of spending hours painstakingly painting hash marks, they can elevate the field by focusing on more creative designs and details.
Instead of preparing for tournaments weeks in advance, they can put down fields the day before or even the day of. The ability to resize fields through the tablet allows teams to better plan for play and make full use of the space they have available to them.
Of course, at the highest level of play — collegiate and professional sports — painting the field manually is a revered and respected ritual. A field painting robot can actually free up more bandwidth for the game field by minimizing the work of maintaining practice fields or setting up fields for youth camps or intramural play.
Though field painting robots often come with a significant price tag attached, they typically pay for themselves within just a few seasons based on paint savings alone.
Sylvania Recreation, based in Sylvania, Ohio, is a bustling parks and recreation organization that operates several facilities, including the 140-acre Pacesetter Park. Home to a club league, Sylvania Recreation must lay down 25-30 soccer fields in preparation for the season.
After finding TinyMobileRobots on Twitter, Sylvania Recreation Facilities and Maintenance Director Brian Hall led the organization to purchase a field painting robot. He compiled data over two years to compare the cost of field painting before and after adopting the field painting robot.
2021 – No Robot | 2022 – With TinyMobileRobots | |
---|---|---|
Number of fields Painted | 29 | 32 |
Man Hours / Cost | 82.75 hrs / $1,961.18 | 22.75 hrs / $555.10 |
Gallons of Paint Used | 90.75 | 20.45 |
Sylvania Recreation, based in Sylvania, Ohio, is a bustling parks and recreation organization that operates several facilities, including the 140-acre Pacesetter Park. Home to a club league, Sylvania Recreation must lay down 25-30 soccer fields in preparation for the season.
After finding TinyMobileRobots on Twitter, Sylvania Recreation Facilities and Maintenance Director Brian Hall led the organization to purchase a field painting robot. He compiled data over two years to compare the cost of field painting before and after adopting the field painting robot.
2021 – No Robot | 2022 – With TinyMobileRobots | |
---|---|---|
Number of fields Painted | 29 | 32 |
Man Hours / Cost | 82.75 hrs / $1,961.18 | 22.75 hrs / $555.10 |
Gallons of Paint Used | 90.75 | 20.45 |
Hall said the biggest selling point for the robot was its accuracy. The ability to sit in the office and plan out 30 fields across the facility with absolute accuracy was a game changer.
The quality of the field painting, he said, helps deliver a high-quality experience that validates parents’ investment in their athletes’ club membership and draws more business as the go-to place to hold tournaments across many sports.
You can hear the full interview in the Sylvania Recreation Customer Success video.
Solving the problems of sports field line painting can be the key to getting the most out of your crew members and taking the atmosphere of your facilities to the next level. As new sports become popular, whether it be flag football, ultimate frisbee, or Quidditch, crews must be able to adapt and provide exceptional experiences.
A field painting robot can pay for itself in less than a single season for high-volume users like parks and rec departments or sports complexes. For high school and collegiate athletic departments, the value of the robot becomes evident practically immediately.
TinyMobileRobots streamlines painting for every type of sport and organization. We help crews stop sweating their lives away from painting fields and help organizations deliver a professional-grade field at any level.
We’ve designed our robots to be the simplest and most user-friendly machines out there. To see how your school or organization could benefit from TinyMobileRobots, reach out to us to learn more or set up a demo to paint one of your fields. We’ll come out to your school with a robot and answer all your questions in person — at no cost.
Schedule a live, one-hour free demonstration of a line-painting robot on one of your fields today.
Watching the TinyMobileRobot in action illustrates the speed, accuracy, and efficiency of our line-marking robot firsthand.
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