Pettrix- You should be in good shape with the system you're installing. I nearly went Goulds but ended up with Sta-Rite/Pentek. My pump is 30gpm and the motor is 5hp which is controlled by VFD. My use is primarily vineyard irrigation for 6-8 hrs straight for 5 to 7 days at a time directly from the well with very small expansion tank...not a volume holding tank....Gary
The Pentek Intellidrive is the newest version of their VFD that is supposed to solve all the problems of their older versions. I have been hearing that same story now for about 30 years. I don’t think the new Pentek has been out long enough to know anything, but I doubt that it will be any better than the older versions. We have been replacing VFD’s with CSV’s on vineyards and other similar systems since 1993.
I don’t bash VFD’s because I make a competing product. I make a competing product because I got bashed by VFD’s. After studying electrical engineering and getting back to work at my family owned pump business 30+ years ago, I thought VFD’s were the coolest thing. I could have built one of my own, but there were several models already on the market, so I just got good at programming and installing them. But when my customers started calling with problems, I had to take a step back. VFD’s were not saving energy as I had been led to believe. They were not making pumps last longer as the salesman had told me. And I was having multiple problems with bearing currents, harmonics, resonance frequency vibration, stray voltage, radio frequency interference, and many other things that I was not told about.
My customers did not blame the VFD. They didn’t know if it was a Yaksuka, Tojibsu, or what brand of equipment they had. All they knew was that I was not keeping their water supply running dependably. So I got the blame and lost customers because of VFD’s. When I got tired of being bashed by VFD’s, I figured out a way to duplicate the performance of a VFD by using a simple and dependable valve. In 1993 I went back and replaced every VFD I had installed with a CSV, and I have never looked back.
Now having said all of that, the pump system in this thread is not a very good candidate for a CSV. A 2HP, 13 GPM pump with a static water level of 220’ will have a backpressure of 192 PSI when using a CSV. And while a 192 PSI backpressure is not a problem for the pump and/or the well pipe and the CSV would work fine, it is a little more backpressure than we like to handle with a CSV.
I would have tested the well, figured out the actual pumping level, and set the appropriate pump so as not to have that much backpressure. When you don’t know how much or from how deep the well will produce, installing an extra large pump at the deepest setting is the only option. But even then, it is only a 13 GPM pump, so I would have just put in a couple of 80 gallon size pressure tanks and had a system that cost less and was more dependable than a VFD.
Also with 4.5" casing the VFD needs to be set up for the pump to flow a minimum of about 5 GPM required for motor cooling. So you would need a little larger tank, as the pump should be cycling on/off when using less than 5 GPM.
Working between 5 GPM and 13 GPM isn't much variation for a VFD or a CSV, which is another reason I would have just used a couple of tanks and no VFD.