jcwren
New Member
OK, so not the best topic title ever, but I couldn't come up with a better one.
I bought a farm that has 2 bored wells and 2 drilled wells. One of the drilled wells is 525' deep with water at 45' and does not have a pump in it (measured with a string and weight) It was decommissioned at some point because of a high iron content, although I don't know how high. I'd like to pull a sample for testing, but I'm not sure how deep I need to go to get a valid sample. If the iron content is low enough to use for non-potable water, I have a spare pump that's a couple years old I could use, but what I don't know how deep does the pump need to go? Are pumps in drilled wells set on the bottom, or do you hit bottom and then come up so many feet, or what?
The other drilled well is around 600' I'm told. It was working up until about 1.5 years ago when some copper thief stole the pressure switch and cut the wire flush with the concrete pad. The wire runs from the pad about 160', then into the control box, and down to the pump. I was going to test the pump with a generator, but I think the generator was optimistically rated and the voltage sagged too much to start the pump (it popped the breaker on the generator, then one of the breakers on the control box). I test the control box and found one of the capacitors was about 50% of it's specified value and a little leaky. The contacts on the starting relay had been arcing for some time and were in terrible shape, so I need to replace the control box. I also resistance tested the cable, and had 2 megohms between ground and all three leads, and had the correct resistance between the windings per the Franklin Electric AIM guide, so unless the pump is now sand-locked, I'm hopeful that it will run with a working control box and a generator that puts out at least 20A at 220V without sagging much.
Any advice, do's or don'ts for getting this pump running? The breaker box that originally powered the pump has been decommissioned, but I have a barn about 150' away that I could probably find enough #10 wire around to run the pump from it's breaker box. I'd prefer to use a generator, but Franklin Electric says being even 1 or 2 Hz off can affect the pump. I don't HAVE to have this pump running, but I'd like to use it run water to a shop building and for some irrigation. Supposedly the water from this well is really good (of course, it'll be tested to confirm that).
Thanks!
--jc
I bought a farm that has 2 bored wells and 2 drilled wells. One of the drilled wells is 525' deep with water at 45' and does not have a pump in it (measured with a string and weight) It was decommissioned at some point because of a high iron content, although I don't know how high. I'd like to pull a sample for testing, but I'm not sure how deep I need to go to get a valid sample. If the iron content is low enough to use for non-potable water, I have a spare pump that's a couple years old I could use, but what I don't know how deep does the pump need to go? Are pumps in drilled wells set on the bottom, or do you hit bottom and then come up so many feet, or what?
The other drilled well is around 600' I'm told. It was working up until about 1.5 years ago when some copper thief stole the pressure switch and cut the wire flush with the concrete pad. The wire runs from the pad about 160', then into the control box, and down to the pump. I was going to test the pump with a generator, but I think the generator was optimistically rated and the voltage sagged too much to start the pump (it popped the breaker on the generator, then one of the breakers on the control box). I test the control box and found one of the capacitors was about 50% of it's specified value and a little leaky. The contacts on the starting relay had been arcing for some time and were in terrible shape, so I need to replace the control box. I also resistance tested the cable, and had 2 megohms between ground and all three leads, and had the correct resistance between the windings per the Franklin Electric AIM guide, so unless the pump is now sand-locked, I'm hopeful that it will run with a working control box and a generator that puts out at least 20A at 220V without sagging much.
Any advice, do's or don'ts for getting this pump running? The breaker box that originally powered the pump has been decommissioned, but I have a barn about 150' away that I could probably find enough #10 wire around to run the pump from it's breaker box. I'd prefer to use a generator, but Franklin Electric says being even 1 or 2 Hz off can affect the pump. I don't HAVE to have this pump running, but I'd like to use it run water to a shop building and for some irrigation. Supposedly the water from this well is really good (of course, it'll be tested to confirm that).
Thanks!
--jc