I wish I put my water line, power line, and spare snake cable inside 4 inch Big-O between the house and well.
After taking numerous trips to the basement, while in the middle of a shower, I went back to a conventional switch. A millisecond dip in pressure will trip the stupid switch, those dips may be just normal fluctuations caused by the pump startup time.Might look at this type of pressure switch, it can save your pump. It will shut off when the pressure gets too low and keep the pump from trying to overcome a leak.
https://www.amazon.com/Square-Schne...hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4583863993176717&psc=1
They are adjustable !After taking numerous trips to the basement, while in the middle of a shower, I went back to a conventional switch. A millisecond dip in pressure will trip the stupid switch, those dips may be just normal fluctuations caused by the pump startup time.
YES! Lay gravel or such on Top of the new line…. This is how someone in the future will know as they dig in the area they are approaching a buried line. Another idea (if it fits your situation)…when I buried a new elect. line… I had some old tin (R-panel actually) from an older roof I’d removed for replacement. I cut the R-panel/tin into 1-foot widths and laid it end to end all along/above the buried line…then covered it up…..so that future diggers will hit the tin and realize they’ve run into electrical service line.One tip for you...cover the new line with about 6" of screenings, sand, or modified stone. The well pipe should lay in that cushion. I'd run a new electric line to it as well. If you don't have any off-sets in the old well line, you can use it (right where it is) as an electrical conduit.
Not sure how deep my well is. I talked to a number of different offices with the county, but they don't have well records. If I do have to pull the pump I am hoping it isnt too deep. The water table where I live is pretty high, so I wouldn't think they would have had to drill that deep.Do your U-Tube homework, and if YOU pull your pump I would use the Torque arrester, who knows what had happened to the well or casing on the prementioned well, they are put in for a reason, also the low pressure auto shut-off switches are a great idea, I have seen a couple neighbors burn up expensive above ground motors when issues arose. I just dropped my first well pump to 340', used special waterproof wire splice, safety rope and proper tools/well pipe clamp. I have heard of the horror stories of dropping tools down and I understand now how they can charge so much, got very heavy, probably around 350 - 400lbs, it felt like.
I took a quick look at mine. It looks like I have a metal cable the runs down and connects to the pump.In my neighbour's case, well is 42' deep and the arrestor (rubbery donut thing) got 'stuck', drilled well, 36 years old. well idiot couldn't get it out ( his idea was to attached comealong to poly pipe and crank it up..all it did was stretch the poly pipe.....).
took drillers less than 2 hrs to put in new well THEY were great....
also add a GOOD SS cable and ftgs to the new pump so it can be pulled out......
Thanks for the step by step. I was was trying to work through the best method in my head of replacing it if I need to. Before I pull the old supply line and attach the new one I am going to clean up the adapter really well to inspect it.Jeremy, take a good look at the fittings between the pitless adapter (goes through the well-casing), and the poly supply line. If they're looking deteriorated, I would not hesitate to replace them. All of them. And, then, good luck removing the nipple from the pitless adapter. It commonly twists off. In that case, you're pulling the submersible pump up far enough to access the inside part of the pitless adapter. Pitless adapters are not too expensive, and widely available (Lowe's, Home Depot).
In my case, my well is only 50-60 feet deep, so I could easily lift everything by hand, with a clamp ready to secure it once I got it high enough. In my case, just a pair of vice grips was enough to secure it.
To replace the part of the adapter that goes through the well casing, the first step is to pass a long piece of wire through the old pitless adapter. Bring both ends of the wire to the top of the casing and twist them together. Then you can remove the old adapter without fear of dropping it down the well. And, then, thread the new adapter part onto the wire loop. Now, you can slide the adapter part down the wire loop and into place without losing it down the well casing! That hole in the casing is typically out-of-reach on the inside of the casing from the surface.
It's kind of a trick to stab the inside part of the new adapter as you drop the whole pump package back down again. I used a 6-foot long piece of rebar to poke the adapter part home, secured by a rope at the top end in case I dropped the rebar. You can use the rebar as a punch with a hammer to coax the adapter part securely into place.
After all this, you'll be a pro, ready to hire out to your friends, and more typically, relatives...
Good Luck!
-Paul
Did you find the leak?Thanks for the step by step. I was was trying to work through the best method in my head of replacing it if I need to. Before I pull the old supply line and attach the new one I am going to clean up the adapter really well to inspect it.
No, but I wasn't really searching for one. The current setup has an outside well house that contains the pressure tank, pressure switch etc. It is a pain to work on anything in it and there is also the possible winter freezing issue to deal with.Did you find the leak?
Lucky for me we still have water, and if we are just running one faucet pressure is usable.....but the wife is pretty patient with this stuff as long as I dont just ignore her/it.GOD, I wish my wife was as patient as yours!
When the hairs need to be washed, I'm on 24-hour duty!
Ya, finding the leak is key.
But, from what we've seen in your images (e.g. The Mud) it is VERY likely to be right there at the fittings between the pitless adapter and the poly line.
One other tip. It can be nearly impossible to get the clearance to slide a buried poly line onto a barbed fitting, lengthwise. So, that ~6" piece of poly just upstream of the elbow is a keeper. Check the downstream elbow for integrity.
I use a torch to soften the poly line to make it easy to slip onto the barbed connectors, but the Real Plumbers tell me that I'm stressing the plastic by doing that, and making it more likely that it will crack.
I balance that risk against the ease of getting the job done and the downside of digging up the line again. For me, it's an hour of shovel work. Eh.
-Paul
I have not read it. Might have to look it up.The mud is a major clue as to the source of the problem.
.
Just sayin...
To me, the poly line is an example of, 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it'.
But, you have a lot invested already in The Fix.
My approach is always to address the immediate problem (the leak) and then to consider the utility (or lack thereof) of putting off a broader approach. To each, his own...
And, you have the backhoe, I don't.
Good Luck!
-Paul
PS, reminds me: Have you ever read "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance." by Robert Pirsig? Should be required reading for ALL high school students!