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Jeff Guay
 
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Default Need help with water pump

Yes I agree with everything you've said, especially about the closet, what a
pain!
So I guess I've resorted to doing another point just for the sprinklers.
How far from the existing point should I be?
"Gary Slusser" wrote in message
...

"Jeff Guay" wrote
Thanks for the input. However I must disagree on your statement that

most
people with wells don't water their lawns. I live in a development

where
everyone is on a well, and I'd say most have lawn sprinklers. Maybe

this
will be a good way to meet the neighbors.
Thanks again,
Jeff
"donald girod" wrote in message
...
Wells aren't that cooperative. You may or may not be able to get

enough
water to water your lawn, but you should definitely drive a separate

well
for the purpose. If it comes in with enough water, great. The main

thing
is to have enough water for your house and not screw up the well you

have.

The pump size is mostly dictated by the well depth. A .5hp pump is

more
than enough to water your lawn; it can deliver 12 gpm from a shallow

well,
if the well has 12 gpm available.

Most people with wells don't water their lawns.


"Jeff Guay" wrote in message
. net...
Hi,
This wonderful new money trap we bought has a problem with the

water
well.
I'm not real sure of the terminology but here goes, I have a

driven
well
point that is supposedly only 21 feet deep. The pump is in a

closet in
the
basement. It has two plastic, 1 inch I think, pipes coming out of

it,
going
into the floor. There is an expansion tank that I cannot see.

(It is
behind the closet wall)
We have more than enough water for household tasks, laundry,

dishwasher,
showers, etc. However when I try to run the lawn sprinkler system

I
have
problems. I can run one zone for about 5 minutes, after that the

pump
starts "chugging". The sprinkler output drops way down and I can

hear
the
pump sucking water from the upstairs toilet and hose spigots. I

can't
stand
the noise from the pump so I shut the system off. Needless to say

my
lawn
has almost completely burnt up.
The interesting thing is that the system must have worked for the

previous
owner, because last fall when we looked at the house the lawn was
gorgeous.
Any suggestions? I've thought of driving another point with a

separate
pump
for just the sprinklers but I'm not sure what size pump and how

far from
the
existing point should I be.
Thanks,
Jeff


The well owner that successfully waters their lawn on and ongoing basis
has a number of things going in their favor. First is the well has been
done with that water use in mind. Second, the pump has been sized
correctly for the well, the house water needs and the irrigation
requirements. Third, they usually water after other water needs have
been met; like overnight etc.. Miss getting any one of those right and
you should stop trying to water the lawn or you may end up with no water
to use anywhere. Or the water will go dirty etc. and you won't want to
use it in the house. Or you burn up a pump.

Anything that has a change in the sound it produces when operating needs
to be serviced or otherwise looked at now; especially a well water pump.
Waiting usually makes things much worse while drastically shortening the
time available to fix it. That usually increases the cost and/or chances
of screwing up the fix.

Anyone putting a well pump and pressure tank in a tight closet should be
shot. At least twice!

The tank has to be checked for proper air pressure, the (compressed) air
is actually the power used to move water when the pump isn't running.
Proper air pressure is 2 psi less air than the cut-in pressure switch
setting; I.E. 30/50 water pressure gets 28 psi air pressure when there
is no water in the tank. If this doesn't solve some of the problems,
then you look at the condition of the pump and how much water is in the
well and the recovery rate of the well. And that's the proper
troubleshooting order.

Gary
Quality Water Associates