ironnut
Member
Chopped,
If I read your original post and post #9, you have 2 check valves, one down at the pump level and another at the pressure tank?
Assuming that your system does not cycle when no water is being used, then I would suspect that the check valve at the pump level is leaking. That would allow the 130 foot column of water to leak back into the well after the pump shuts off. You may have a small leak in the pipe from the check valve on the manifold by the captive air tank down into the well. That would allow air to fill into the pipe going down into the well. When the pump starts it forces this air into the system. Even if there are no leaks, the atmospheric pressure can at most support a column of water about 32 feet high. Any dissolved gases in the well water will come out and a great deal of water vapor as the water level in the pipe going down into the well drops and distance from the surface to the water level is greater than 32 feet. Granted the water vapor will pretty much condense back into liquid but the un-dissolved gases will stay un-dissolved as the water is pushed into the system (e.g. the pressure tank and faucets).
Can you see or hear any leaks in the well casing when the pump is running? If the pipe going down to the pump has leaks in it it will most likely be near the static water level.
gordon
If I read your original post and post #9, you have 2 check valves, one down at the pump level and another at the pressure tank?
Assuming that your system does not cycle when no water is being used, then I would suspect that the check valve at the pump level is leaking. That would allow the 130 foot column of water to leak back into the well after the pump shuts off. You may have a small leak in the pipe from the check valve on the manifold by the captive air tank down into the well. That would allow air to fill into the pipe going down into the well. When the pump starts it forces this air into the system. Even if there are no leaks, the atmospheric pressure can at most support a column of water about 32 feet high. Any dissolved gases in the well water will come out and a great deal of water vapor as the water level in the pipe going down into the well drops and distance from the surface to the water level is greater than 32 feet. Granted the water vapor will pretty much condense back into liquid but the un-dissolved gases will stay un-dissolved as the water is pushed into the system (e.g. the pressure tank and faucets).
Can you see or hear any leaks in the well casing when the pump is running? If the pipe going down to the pump has leaks in it it will most likely be near the static water level.
gordon