Kevin_in_VA
Silver Member
I know that this has nothing to do with my tractor (yet), but I thought someone here could help me with it. I tried posting it at Doityourself.com, but I guess I asked too many questions.
I have a shallow well, with a submersible pump (now 10yrs old) that until two months ago was giving me 50PSI house pressure. Now it is struggling to maintain 35PSI, and if I open the contacts on the pressure switch (i.e. de-energize the pump) it drops off to zero PSI. Also when I shut the cutoff valve in the discharge of the pump, pressure does not increase as you would expect.
The Well is 75 ft from the house is about 25FT deep and the water level has maintained relatively constant over the 7 years that we have been in the house. I have traced the line from the well to the house and there are no visible indications of any leaks on the outside, and none on the interior of the house, toilets do not run continuously, no drips at any faucets.
Back in November last year we started seeing unusually large amounts of sand/sediment in the first stage filter which is located downstream of the pump, but the problem cleared up after a week or so. The only cause I could think of was that our neighbor (about 500 feet away) sank a new well on their property and tapped into our stream.
I have several questions:
1.) Could the sediment have worn the pump sufficiently to have rendered it unable to pump against the tank pressure?
2.) Could the sediment have fouled the water side of the tank to render it unusable, and all I am seeing is pump pressure?
3.) Could the pressure switch (replaced it the same time I replaced the tank 5yrs ago) be bad? (I don't see how this would fit in this scenario)
4.)If I installed a properly sized Jet Pump in the discharge of the submersible pump and then de-energized the submersible, given the distances and depth I listed above, would it pull enough suction head through the idle pump to get my house pressure back up to 45 - 50 PSI? This would be in the house 75 ft from the well and the existing pump, otherwise it would involve excavating and installing new water line and running power to the new pump at the well location.
5.) Given the fact that the pressure does not increase at shutoff head (i.e. pump running with discharge shut). That would idicate that I have a leak somewhere (again, no visible indications anywhere). Could something else cause this (worn pump, etc....)?
6.)How easy is it to replace a submersible pump anyway?
7.) Could the pressure tank (20gal 5yrs old) be fouled and not regulating the pressure or is it backflushing the water through the pump back to the well, it has a 33PSI air charge on the bladder.
8.) Am I biting off more than I can chew here, and should I hire someone to fix this? I am quite capable in plumbing and electrical matters, and my wife was once a journeyman electrician.
I have a shallow well, with a submersible pump (now 10yrs old) that until two months ago was giving me 50PSI house pressure. Now it is struggling to maintain 35PSI, and if I open the contacts on the pressure switch (i.e. de-energize the pump) it drops off to zero PSI. Also when I shut the cutoff valve in the discharge of the pump, pressure does not increase as you would expect.
The Well is 75 ft from the house is about 25FT deep and the water level has maintained relatively constant over the 7 years that we have been in the house. I have traced the line from the well to the house and there are no visible indications of any leaks on the outside, and none on the interior of the house, toilets do not run continuously, no drips at any faucets.
Back in November last year we started seeing unusually large amounts of sand/sediment in the first stage filter which is located downstream of the pump, but the problem cleared up after a week or so. The only cause I could think of was that our neighbor (about 500 feet away) sank a new well on their property and tapped into our stream.
I have several questions:
1.) Could the sediment have worn the pump sufficiently to have rendered it unable to pump against the tank pressure?
2.) Could the sediment have fouled the water side of the tank to render it unusable, and all I am seeing is pump pressure?
3.) Could the pressure switch (replaced it the same time I replaced the tank 5yrs ago) be bad? (I don't see how this would fit in this scenario)
4.)If I installed a properly sized Jet Pump in the discharge of the submersible pump and then de-energized the submersible, given the distances and depth I listed above, would it pull enough suction head through the idle pump to get my house pressure back up to 45 - 50 PSI? This would be in the house 75 ft from the well and the existing pump, otherwise it would involve excavating and installing new water line and running power to the new pump at the well location.
5.) Given the fact that the pressure does not increase at shutoff head (i.e. pump running with discharge shut). That would idicate that I have a leak somewhere (again, no visible indications anywhere). Could something else cause this (worn pump, etc....)?
6.)How easy is it to replace a submersible pump anyway?
7.) Could the pressure tank (20gal 5yrs old) be fouled and not regulating the pressure or is it backflushing the water through the pump back to the well, it has a 33PSI air charge on the bladder.
8.) Am I biting off more than I can chew here, and should I hire someone to fix this? I am quite capable in plumbing and electrical matters, and my wife was once a journeyman electrician.