ponytug
Super Member
Our first pump went 35 years. Just curious, are you on three phase delta?I just had our pump and controller replaced two weeks ago. The last VFD controller and pump was replaced on 2009/10 (can’t remember). It was a one phase power unit; the new one is three phase, so I’m hoping at least to see lower power usage. But my 2hp pump is at 660’ so it works pretty hard. We did install 4 check valves in the pipe at equal distances along the pipe, so it stays charged between demand.
Your numbers are spot on our numbers.I saw the old pump and the new pump, both 2hp. And the flow of the new pump is very good. Maybe the check valves are the answer? It’s a 3 phase Franklin submersible and it’s putting out 9-10 gpm at the house. The well is 680’ total and the pump is at the bottom of 33 20’ pipe sticks.
Edit: I do irrigate all summer and run lawn sprinklers, but one circuit at a time.
The check valves save energy as your pump doesn't have to refill the pipe, and help prevent a backwash that could stir up sediment in the well. They also help relieve the load on the check valve at the pump, keeping the pressure difference across any given check valve to a lower value. The only downside I can see would be an increase in moving parts, and therefore wear/maintenance over time.
@WinterDeere yes, I agree HP is the ability to do work (e.g. gpm x lift), but as a pump faces higher heads, the efficiency of any given centrifugal pump impeller drops off, so one needs to add impellers to the stack to generate the given head efficiently. It is easy to design in. For any given depth, there will be range of the optimal number of impellers for a given HP and desired flow. I would have a look at Franklin or Grundfos pages for specifics, if you are curious.
@WinterDeere I suspect that your prior issues with your well may have had other solutions besides pulling the check valve at the top of the well due to water hammer, besides fixing the leaking valves in the well. Water coming up several hundred feet of pipe is going to have momentum and if there is any is any air in the line, that's going to be a heck of a water hammer that's going to be hard on any parts of the plumbing. Ouch.
All the best,
Peter