Egon
Epic Contributor
I disagree! I have been teaching classes to thousands of pump installers and engineers in this country and others for almost 30 years now. I have found that 95% of the installers and engineers really don't know much about what they are doing. Pumps are counter intuitive, which really messes with engineers and installers, as they think everything in the world is intuitive. Pumps don't like to rest and running 24/7/365 is good for them. Back pressure is also good for pumps. A soft start or ramping up the speed slowly is not good for a submersible motor. These things and many others are counter intuitive, which is why pump installers and engineers with closed minds will never understand. The 5% who understand these counter intuitive principles laugh at the hard headedness of their colleges.
Even though I have studied pumps and electronics for 50 years, I still learn something new occasionally. I would never claim to know it all. However, 95% of pump installers think they know all there is to know, which is a sure indication that they do not. The 5% who are humble, quite, and are not afraid to say "I don't know but I will find out" are the intelligent ones. Don't take my word or any installer or engineers word for it. Do the research. Be careful to weed out the hype and advertisements from the facts. Read reviews, ask for references, and make up your own mind which way is best. Again, no one should care more about your water than you.
You’re definitely entitled to your opinion.
My impression is there are many competent people out there. More than we realize. Those folks probably have no need of your instructions.
The easiest solution to centrifugal pump cycling is to size or restrict the outlet flow to what the demand will be. Pump stays running till use is stopped. The water will be used till low pressure starts the pump. Then it does not have capacity to build up pressure.
Another way is to have the amperage draw control the pump output by bypass or restriction.
By the way; my pump knowledge is negligible. The basic pump design may be understood but the actual construction with thrust plates, diameter and number of stages and wideness of stages and materials is sort of murky. So is my knowledge of the control systems and how instrumentation and valuing works.
And I do have well drilling experience using the “Baptist Drilling System” Slow but one of the easiest rigs to set up and can detect low water flows a rotary rig will miss. For water wells it sure beats the Thumper.