The bunker panel
Click a bunker on the map and its panel opens. This is where the whole story of that bunker lives, its condition, its schedule, its work, and its history, split across five tabs. Here’s the lay of the land.
Overview
Section titled “Overview”The dashboard for the bunker. At the top is its Score, a single 0 to 100% read on overall condition, with a target of 90% or better. That score comes from the readings right below it:
- Sand depth, measured against the target range you set.
- Contamination, edge quality, firmness, and weeds.
Update a reading and the score moves with it. If a reading comes back out of range, Turfile offers to flag it as an issue on the spot.
Below the condition metrics is a snapshot of the bunker’s physical facts: its area, target depth range, estimated sand volume and sand load in tons (worked out from the depth and area), the liner type, and when it was constructed. Condition and characteristics, both in one glance.
Inspections
Section titled “Inspections”Every bunker runs on its own inspection cadence, like every 45 days. Set the frequency and a checklist here, and the next-due date is what surfaces in your inventory, so you always know what needs checking.
When you’re at the bunker, Start inspection to record the visit: sand depth, contamination, edge, firmness, weeds, notes, and photos. Saving updates the bunker’s live readings and rolls the next-due date forward.
Issues
Section titled “Issues”Log a problem on the bunker, thin sand, contamination, weeds, a bad edge, and add notes or photos. From there it works like everywhere else in Turfile: assign it as a to-do to put it on someone’s plate, and resolve it with a note when it’s handled, which closes the linked to-do.
The bunker’s sand and maintenance journal. Jot down what happened, a fresh sand delivery, an edging, a drainage fix, with a date and photos. It’s the running diary of everything done to the bunker over time.
History
Section titled “History”Every event on the bunker in one timeline: inspections, issues, logs, and condition changes, oldest to newest. It’s how you see whether a bunker is trending better or slipping.