Quote:
The pressure tank air bladder may need refilled. it may have a slow leak. a friend of ours filled theirs with a tire pump every other month until they saved up enough to buy a new pressure tank.
Robert
PS here is a link that may help
http://www.sprinklers4irrigation.com/en-us/pg_75.html
Thank you for the link. I had found that web site and it has been useful today.
Oh geez! What a day we have had with the pressure tank!
I have mentioned that I never work on the well? I mean, I really do tons of stuff around here already and fixing the water to run perfectly has not been a major concern with all the other stuff I do but today I drug DH down to the well house and commenced to figuring out how we should get this thing in great shape again. Since my Dad passed away DH has been rather lost in keeping it going as well as it should.
Last winter he bought another pressure tank because he said the other one was no good. Thank goodness he just unhooked one and attached the other and left the older one just sitting there in the well house. (Daddy built the well house to look like an outhouse. He had a great sense of humor!)
So I unhook the newer tank as it was holding at 30 psi and dropping it to 25 changed nothing, not to mention it had no water in the tank. Forgive me if I am dense but all the web sites I read said that water was supposed to be in these tanks and it made sense to me but ours was empty.
I unhooked it and took it out side and turned it over. DH took all the connections off and we realized there is a rubber plug in the bottom of the tank. How is the water to get in there? I checked the air pressure in the tank again. 25 psi.
Really, I have no idea about this stuff. I came back to the house read everything again, trotted back down to the well (why do my legs not look like a marathon runners????) and I proceeded....and please don't laugh....to have DH drill that dang plug out!
Whoops.
So now that I messed up one pressure tank that was holding air very well (still have no idea how water is supposed to get into the tank with that blasted plug in the bottom) I turned to the old tank that also said it had 30 psi in it. We attached it back to the pump and turned the pump back on. I lowered the psi to 20. The water still runs the same as before but I think I can feel water in the tank now.
Next, after DH gets up from his nap (poor baby
) we will see about adjusting the spring again because I haven't a clue where to go from here.
Thank you everyone for your input as I am about as lost as they come when plumbing or electricity is involved.
one more thing to check...
D. Electrical problems
a) Improper connections at control box. If color codes were not kept the pump will attempt to start on the run winding and will not be able to continue running
b) Low voltage. 230 volt pumps will run on 115 volts but not very well and will cut out and reset.
This happens when one pole of a two pole circuit breaker has tripped. Pull both poles all the way to off, then back to on.
from
http://www.greenroadfarm.com/wells.html#selection