Valveman
Platinum Member
The instructions to those pressure switches are confusing. If you don't mess with the small adjustment screw the difference between on and off will stay at 20 PSI. If you already messed with the little adjustment screw, just loosen it all the way. That will be about 17-20 PSI between on and off. Then make all your adjustments with the larger adjustment screw. Tightening it down will increase the pressure, lefty loosy will decrease the pressure setting. The most common setting is 40/60.
Filing points in the pressure switch is not good. There is a contact surface that you are destroying. I would get a new switch. Ants can get in a switch and mess up the contacts, but most of the time the contacts are burned from cycling on and off too much. When i see burned pressure switches or pressure switch band widths opened up to 30/60, I know the person is having problems with the pump cycling, which is what destroys most pumps.
The pump should never cycle while running sprinklers. Not only do the sprinklers not shoot out far enough at the lower end of the pressure cycle, but the pump is being cycled to death. A constant pressure valve like the Cycle Stop Valve would keep the pressure at a constant 50 PSI while running sprinklers or showers, instead of the pump continually cycling between 40 and 60. This not only keeps the spray pattern perfect but makes the pump, tank, pressure switch, and everything else last much longer.
Filing points in the pressure switch is not good. There is a contact surface that you are destroying. I would get a new switch. Ants can get in a switch and mess up the contacts, but most of the time the contacts are burned from cycling on and off too much. When i see burned pressure switches or pressure switch band widths opened up to 30/60, I know the person is having problems with the pump cycling, which is what destroys most pumps.
The pump should never cycle while running sprinklers. Not only do the sprinklers not shoot out far enough at the lower end of the pressure cycle, but the pump is being cycled to death. A constant pressure valve like the Cycle Stop Valve would keep the pressure at a constant 50 PSI while running sprinklers or showers, instead of the pump continually cycling between 40 and 60. This not only keeps the spray pattern perfect but makes the pump, tank, pressure switch, and everything else last much longer.