MacLawn
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2007
- Messages
- 1,394
- Tractor
- JD 2210
Thanks. Won't work then. I keep my 240v 1 hp motor going.
My well is 100% solar. I did it all myself.
It has been flawless for over 12 years. The down hole pump is a Grundfos 6fx I think. It is a multi voltage pump that will run on almost any voltage Ac or dc. I run mine on 6 solar panels producing 72 volts at about 400 watts. It pumps about 3 gallons a minute on the 72 volts. i pump into a 1500 gallon storage tank.
from the storage tank I use a separate pump to pressurize my pressure tank. I use 6 12 volt 40 watt panels in parallel to charge a storage battery that drives a 12 volt RV type pump. That pump charges the pressure tank.
I don't need it but I can pump an easy 1000 gallons a day if I had to. It is simple and it works. Trying to use the same pump to pump from the well and charge a pressure tank with solar is not a good idea. Most pumps simply will not do it. My well pump is multi voltage and I can run it off of a generator if needed. I have only had to do that one time.
Yah this makes a lot more sense! A pump barely big enough to deliver something like 20 psi and a few gpm to SLOWLY fill a reservoir......then a second pump to deliver normal pressure and flow to the house.
If grid power is not available, a system like Jimbrowns works very well. However, if you have grid power available, a house pump only uses about a nickles worth of power every day. It would be impossible to justify the cost of a solar pump system with electric savings. It will cost more just to maintain and replace those batteries than it cost to pay the electric bill for a grid powered pump.
I've been wanting to do a solar powered pump on my land to fill a tank that I can use to water my wife's vegetable garden every day. Her water usage adds over a hundred dollars a month to my water bill, which is all city water. My thought was that as the sun came up, it would start charging the solar cells and they would power the pump. Water is only ten feed down where I want to get it, and then about a thousand feet to the house, and up another 30 feet including the height of the tank, so 40 feet max lift from the water to the tank. It's a big project and the cost up front is more then I want to spend. I honestly never thought about running power down there and pumping it that way. Now I'm wondering if I have over thought this, made it more complicated then it needed to be, and if it would be cheaper to just run power down there and be done with it?
A shallow well pump would pull water through 1,000 feet of pipe as long as the vertical distance is 25' or less, it's the vertical distance more than the horizontal that is the limiter. Put the pump where the pipe is closest to the house and save all that wiring. The big thing to worry about is freezing. It may end up the easiest way to protect the pump from freezing is to put the pump inside the house, run the pipe from the well to the house and then from the house to the garden. Even if it means more pipe it could be less work.
Another obvious point that I didn't think of. No need for all that wiring, and I can easily build a pump house next to a storage tank by the house. Priming it might be an issue, but I always have the city water and a hose to do that, so it shouldn't be too hard. Thanks!!!!