Help with water supply line

   / Help with water supply line #11  
You might look into running a 2" or so, line to a storage tank, about half way, and maybe a booster pump of yours from that tank to another tank nearby the house. A run of 1000ft on level ground isn't that bad when filling a tank. Getting 10-20gpm for a tank fill is a piece of cake that way. My well is 400ft deep. Before our 3 yr drought here, my static level was at 60ft, but I bet it's about 200 by now. My storage tank is over 600ft from my well and my submersible runs it from the well to the tank. My tank is about 20-30ft above ground level of the well, so the pump is pushing 600ft with 230ft of head. With good water supplies I get about 8-10gpm from the well, but last time I checked It was giving steady 5 gpm AT MY TANK. I have a booster pump at my tank that supplies the house. The line from my submersible to the tank is 1" PVC and I ran 1" from tank to house.

My booster pump is a jet pump, like my submersible, but only because fire suppression system was required when we built and his was the only style that met the flow/pressure requirements.

With a staged system I think it's doable. But it won't be cheap.
 
   / Help with water supply line #12  
Several things to consider. It doesn't really matter how much pressure you have at the street or how much elevation change that you have since you will have to live with it no matter what it is. What needs to be your biggest concern is how much movement in the soil do you have? At 2,000 feet, the soil can move an inch to several inches. Some types of clay here in Texas move an inch in less then a hundred feet!!!!

There are several ways to deal with soil movement, but first you have to understand how it moves. When dirt gets wet and then freezes, it moves. This expansion is exactly like an ice cube in a tray. In my area, it might not happen all year, but then in other years, the ground is saturated and the ground moves a lot.

If possible, dig down below the frost line to keep movement to a minimal. In CA, where I'm from and worked, we would have to put a 12 inch layer of sand on the bottom of the trench, lay the pipe in the middle with 12 inches of sand on both sides, and another 12 inches of sand above it. This cuts down on the movement of the pipe from the surrounding soil.

Almost all water like breaks are from the pipes being pulled apart from the soil moving. To deal with this, pipes are gasketed. Which means one end slides into the other end and a gasket creates the seal. In some pipes, they can slide half a foot in and out and not leak!!! From what I've seen and worked on, 2 inches is the smallest size water line available. You might find smaller, I just have never seen it.

Given what I know about pipes in the ground, I would go with a gasketed 2 inch water line from the street to your house. I would take into consideration your soil type and how cold it gets before deciding how deep I would go, and if I was going to add sand around the pipe.
 
   / Help with water supply line #13  
Then once you get the pipe installed and the water turned on, I would test to see what your water pressure is. 60 pounds is ideal. A little less is ok, but there is a point it's too low. If you are at that point, there are pumps and storage tanks that you can add to the line to create more water pressure.

If your line goes downhill, you can increase the amount of water pressure you have at the house to more then what it started out with at the street. Then you will need a reducer to get it down to 60 pounds. Too much water pressure will allow water to run through your toilets non stop. You wont hear it or notice it until you get your water bill!!! It's not uncommon to have too much pressure and end up with a bill for 60,000 gallons in one month.

Easiest way to check water pressure is to buy a gauge in the sprinkler section of Home Depot or Lowes and attach it to a water spicket. Turn on the water and read what the gauge says.
 
   / Help with water supply line #14  
I checked pressure drop through a 3/4" line for a couple gpm, which is about all you need for a house, and it was pretty much negligible. So, other's recommendation of 1" sounds good to me.

I'd run poly pipe. You can get it in long rolls, even 500' at Lowes/Home Depot. Might be able to get longer rolls at a plumbing supply place, but it might be too heavy to deal with.

Ralph
 
   / Help with water supply line #15  
I have a water line that is 7200' long. I ran 500' rolls of 1.5" black PE plastic pipe and used locking dresser couplings to connect it. Expansion and contraction pulled a couple of those locking dresser couplings apart the first few years. This kind of pipe will expand or contract a bout 1" for every 100' per 10F degree temperature change. I should have buried it deeper than 2' because the soil temp changes from 50F to 80F depending on the time of year. That equates to 18' of expansion from winter to summer or 18' of contraction from summer to winter.

If I had it to do over again I would not run such a straight line. I would zig and zag a bit for expansion. What happens is the summer expands the pipe and then it rains and settles the dirt around the pipe. Then in the winter when it contracts, there is no space in the ditch, and it pulls apart at the connections.

I would think this expansion and contraction would have the same effect on the gasket pipe. I would worry that when it expands it would push dirt into the gaskets and cause a leak. I now know why the Alaska pipeline and all overhead power lines have a zig zag in them every so often.

If you don't have enough pressure at the house you could always add a storage tank and use a booster pump to pressure the house. That would also give you 1000 gallons, or whatever size the storage tank is, as reserve for when the city supply is disrupted.
 
   / Help with water supply line #16  
If thermal expansion will be a problem there are expansion joints for that purpose.
 
   / Help with water supply line #17  
I would expect 1"-1 1/2" poly to be best ... with a caveat that the house should have a tank and booster or shallow well pump plumbed as though coming from a well to maintain uniform pressure at all taps.

Going to 'work' tonight at the plumbing shop/fur shed. I'll ask the 'boss' (Master plumber, 16 yrs exp) if he's ever seen something like this. (diameter/distance)

(If I don't comment further by morning, he hasn't. :laughing:)

btw, my experience with 'expansion' is from a dig to replace hydrants between corrals. My 'guide' (with story pole) wandered away (40+ stalls to clean) and I wasn't able to maintain a consistent trench depth by eyeball from the seat. (~4')

Customer did the backfill w/new lines sagging in the trench and little tamping before or after. I was back in two months to dig up one hydrant whose connection had pulled apart after the fill had settled.

I strongly second a sand bed, compacting that (rent the machine) before laying, and as much zig & zag as trench width will allow. tog
 
   / Help with water supply line #18  
There are friction loss and pressure loss tables in a lot of irrigation manuals . One thing for sure is I would lay 2 pipes on each side of the ditch , one as a spare . I would run a 3 rd pipe as a conduit . The thin wall pvc from an irrigation supply house would work , its used on golf courses all the time on longer runs . If the soil is rocky definatly backfill with sand . If you have to make turns use thrust blocks or 2 45 degree fittings . Check the prices on schedule 40 at the irrigation supply house , its not that much different when your buying a lot. You will need to know the pressure and flow at the supply to do your calculations .

I am an irrigation contractor , based on past experience inch and a half pipe should do you fine .
 
   / Help with water supply line #19  
I've searched all over and can't find an answer. My house will be 2000 feet from the rural water supply. Standard house...wife, two kids, no pool. What size pipe do I need to run? Unfortunately, there is no shallow water for a well and any water is 3000 feet down.

Can you clarify a couple things for me? 2000 feet to what size pipe and fittings? A city constant source or a private deep well? What is the pressure and volume at the source where you would tap in to? 3000' is a deep one.
 
   / Help with water supply line
  • Thread Starter
#20  
Thank you everyone for the great feedback. Hopefully someday I can help you out on a subject I am knowledgeable of.

Last time the soil froze here was probably during the last ice age.

Another question. I have a skid steer. Do you think it would be better to rent a trenching attachment or rent a dedicated trenching machine for this length? Soil is blackland clay with no rock insight.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

UNUSED FUTURE SKID STEER SIDE SHIFT FORKS (A51244)
UNUSED FUTURE SKID...
UNUSED AGT QUICK ATTACH AUGER SET (A51244)
UNUSED AGT QUICK...
UNUSED CFG INDUSTRIAL SSFM81 FORESTRY DRUM MULCHER (A51244)
UNUSED CFG...
New Calf Hut (A50515)
New Calf Hut (A50515)
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
CATERPILLAR 320GC EXCAVATOR (A51242)
CATERPILLAR 320GC...
 
Top