air lines after pump/motor/ drop line replaced

Users who are viewing this thread

lkcummings

New Member
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Two weeks or so ago, we turned on the faucets and got no water from our 625' deep well. The well guy saw lots of sand in the filters, said the sand had ruined the impellers in the pump, pulled the drop pipe up 20', replaced the motor/pump, and replaced all the galvanized steel drop pipe with PVC pipe. Worked great for three days, then we started getting huge amounts of air in the lines, particularly in bathroom where water probably first enters the house. The water spurts so hard it soaks the person standing at the faucet. It usually comes from the hot water faucet, although also somewhat in cold water and toilets. We have a hot water recirculator, and sometimes it seems to take a while now to get hot water, when before hot water was always instantaneous. There also seems to be much more disolved gas in the water; water is milky at first, and clears from the bottom - very, very fine bubbles at first. Never noticed that before. In his initial attempts to fix the problem, the well guy used our air compressor to add pressure to the tank - I'm wondering if he could have overdone it, and broke the bladder? He does say the pressure holds steady at 28 PSI. Or is it something else? Check valve? Foot valve? - sometimes we can use the faucet several times with no problem. Sometimes it happens each time we first turn it on, then it might get better, then if you let it run a while, it starts spurting hard again - sometimes the water stops, and only air comes out. And it's MUCH worse in the master bathroom than in the kitchen or in the second bathroom.

Sorry for the long description, but sometimes a certain detail is the key to diagnosing the problem. I think the guy we're using knows well pumps and motors, but not too much about this problem. I hate to spend a lot more money chasing this down. Oh, we're in Santa Fe, NM, if that means anything. Thanks for any help.
 

Leejosepho

DIY scratch-pad engineer
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
0
Points
36
Location
200 miles south of Little Rock
Website
www.nonameyet.org
lkcummings said:
... 625' deep well ...
... pulled the drop pipe up 20' ...
... replaced ... with PVC pipe ...
... getting huge amounts of air in the lines ...

Sometimes we can use the faucet several times with no problem. Sometimes it happens each time we first turn it on, then it might get better, then if you let it run a while, it starts spurting hard again - sometimes the water stops, and only air comes out.

My guess is that your pump needs to go back down that 20' to keep it from occasionally getting air.
 

Raucina

New Member
Messages
515
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Maybe you have plain tanks and the air was over added in which case you can have a few days of air discharge causing a big show at the tap.

Or you have a bad well that is going dry.... the well guy speculated that the sediment level in the well had risen and he would go above it - maybe he was right, but you need to check water level when PUMPING - not too easy a proposition.... try to add a pumptrol before pulling it all out again. I dont think that 20 ' is critical at all in such a deep well, if you have only that margin, then you have a dry hole
 
Top
Hey, wait a minute.

This is awkward, but...

It looks like you're using an ad blocker. We get it, but (1) terrylove.com can't live without ads, and (2) ad blockers can cause issues with videos and comments. If you'd like to support the site, please allow ads.

If any particular ad is your REASON for blocking ads, please let us know. We might be able to do something about it. Thanks.
I've Disabled AdBlock    No Thanks