Driving A New Well

   / Driving A New Well #51  
My body states washing it the way to go if you have a water pressure source. :D

For those driving does keeping the pipe stem full of water seem to help or hurt?
 
   / Driving A New Well
  • Thread Starter
#52  
My body states washing it the way to go if you have a water pressure source. :D

For those driving does keeping the pipe stem full of water seem to help or hurt?

Little difference, Gale, in my experience. I'm sure every situation is different.
Agree on washing. It REALLY helps to have water pressure. Landscaping companies that wash in wells use a pressurized system, similar to a power washer. Of course, if you hit a big old rock that the glacier left behind, you have to start again. :)
 
   / Driving A New Well #53  
If I had water pressure I think I would try a 3/4 pipe first. That would check for big rocks, etc and leave a pilot hole. The water pressure would be the same as the pressure of the water system unlike with the 2" casing.

Cave-ins might be a problem but you could note the sands coming out. I could work for driving a well too perhaps?

There is a company that sells a small drilling rig that I wanted about 30 years ago but laws prevent custom drilling in our state without licenses now.
 
   / Driving A New Well #54  
If you did a pilot hole and tried to come back in the same hole I don't think it would work. I would imagine that your second run would just pump your surface water into the ground water you just washed into.

Maybe start over a few yards away from the first hole.
 
   / Driving A New Well
  • Thread Starter
#55  
The well is down. The pump has been all cleaned up and all fittings removed and re-taped. I has a small list of things to fetch.

6' of 1 1/4" flexible plastic pipe
3' of 1" flexible "hose"
check valve
barbed fittings

Might go tomorrow and pick these up. Supposed to be 90F which is a killer. Might have to take a ride in the A/C to get stuff. :D:D
 

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   / Driving A New Well #56  
That was a great job on cleaning up that jet pump. :thumbsup:
 
   / Driving A New Well #57  
If you did a pilot hole and tried to come back in the same hole I don't think it would work. I would imagine that your second run would just pump your surface water into the ground water you just washed into.

Maybe start over a few yards away from the first hole.

Maybe some rethinking is required here on my part. :laughing:
 
   / Driving A New Well #58  
I've got an above ground pool and an unused 1 hp inground pump. We've got a pretty good clay here (when they did the dirtwork for my house a track hoe couldn't scrap it up) and above it is that ol red clay. I'm thinking of using the community water to do what I can and then swap over to that pool pump and pool to punch through those clays. I've got about 100' of 1" laying around to flow back with and at least 40' of 2" to spud it in with. I'll have to buy all the needed fittings, too. I need some more gravel for the drive and I may get them to bring pea gravel and steal some of that to pack it with. I'm excited, but it'll have to wait til next month as the job has me out of state right now.
 
   / Driving A New Well #59  
Late last year I started a thread with the exact same title as this one...if you want more info: "Driving a new well"

The above talk about holes reminded me of my "starter hole"......which is pretty important when starting to drive well pipe. (You need a straight hole to start). Some use a post-hole digger or other methods. (I also considered just hammering a 6' long pipe into the ground and pulling it back out with my loader.....for a starter hole.)

Anyway........I have sandy land without rocks.....so I took my shop-vac and fashioned a jagged edge on the working end of the hard plastic wand. By twisting the vac wand just a bit to agitate the soil.....the vac sucked a straight hole in the ground VERY QUICKLY. I got a hole about 5 feet deep in a matter of 5 or 10 minutes. I had to stop because I was worried I would get the flexible tube stuck in the ground.

Kinda wished I would have had more rigid tubing to see how deep I could pull the soil.....but alas.

Kinda liked the vacuumed hole idea and thought I would share.......:thumbsup::laughing:
 
   / Driving A New Well #60  
Spent a few hours raising and dropping iron to get about a foot into the shale layer under my orchard. Painfully slow, but not as bad as hauling water twice a day. I have no idea how thick the shale is, but I'll just pound pipe while I pump water every day.

Heat and humidity left me in a stink today, and the black flies did nothing good for my attitude.

The drive weight was made by my neighbor's father. It's a slug of solid axle shaft welded to a section of pipe. I had to set up a gun tackle to cut the weight in half so that I could manage it myself. Fortunately, the weight falls freely when I drop the line!

The same neighbor helped me set up the tripod of red pine poles that he had cut last winter. I have a great neighbor!

My goal is to have a working well by the end of the month, but I hope that God's green earth cooperates!
 

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