Not are all that easy.
Some have a small wedge that needs a square wrench on the end of a 6' handle.
Also it's very easy to drop the wedge down the well!
You still need the tee handled pipe to pull the adapter, pipe , and pump.
first time I pulled our pump was lastnight, it has that style wedge lock- I have looked and found ZERO information on the web about this style, until stumbling upon this mention a day later...I believe ours was original, installed way back in 1971- is that possible?
had to weld up a squaredrive tool (1/2" adapter, welded to a pipe with a L-handle) what a pain in the butt to get back into the discharge port and seal...took half a dozen tries before finding the sealing position... the adapter has about a 1/4" projection that hooks into a hole in the casing, but its just there to locate it/prevent sliding down after its wedged from the looks of it. if the projection isnt in the hole, the seal is visibly away from the casing wall. the sealing O-ring has loops that lash it onto the adapter, no idea if the rubber is available for replacement- luckily ours finally sealed after numerous tries- my back is killing me
do you have any info on these styles? I think when warm weather gets here (if ever) I'm gonna dig/run new wire/pipe/etc, (only a couple feet deep to the discharge) as whats there is over 40 years old and fugly...think I'll put a newer - easier to hang pitless adapter in, just wonder what I'll need to do to close off the old pitless hole/bung/whatever they have on it... thanks in advance for any info.
BTW- ours had the wedge safety wired to the adapter- I was scared to loosen the bolt too far for fear of unknown... could it and/or the wedge fall down in? was a kinda false worry luckily, live and learn I guess...
if by some odd chance some other 'beginner' like me stumbles into this thread looking for info on 'wedge type pitless' adapters: the bolt has a flared bottom, so fully loosening is fine, and the wedge is pocketed so it cant fall off till its out of the case (just at the top I can see how easily one would plop into the well if not safety wired). I had put a small NefeB magnet in the 'socket' and just turned 90 at a time- figures, soon as the adapter was free, the bolt had 90 degrees more to its stop
the last owner musta P.O.'d the well guy... the 5" casing top had a 4" threaded stub welded on to a adapter welded to the casing, the pitless adapter was impossible to pull out without cutting the very top off the casing...what a joy that was...2am this morning, we had water again, I tack welded the bottleneck small 'top' back on for now...what a evening... at least it didnt happen a week ago in subzero weather- I'm sure well guys gotta deal with stuff like this in all weather/all hours, hats off to you... not fun pulling even a relatively lightweight 90 foot slippery/slimy drop in the cold even with extra hands
