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questions to ask when discussing a new well.

uncletater

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Joined
Oct 6, 2011
Messages
500
Location
China Grove, NC
I was hoping that you guys could help me out.

I am beginning the process of getting quotes on a well. I have never been down this road before and was wondering what I should be asking.

I have always been on city water so this is all new to me. I have spoken to the people around me and they all said thier wells range from 120 feet to 200 feet.

I assume that the company will quote digging x feet. Electrical hook up and pad for well. If they go deeper I guess I pay by the foot.

Any advice would be helpful. I really have no idea on what to expect. Cost wise I ham hoping to come in around 6 to 8 thousand.

thanks
 
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uncletater

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Oct 6, 2011
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China Grove, NC
But where are you located? I am in NC and I would hope that this is a rater slow time for them. I really don't see many of the trucks running up and down the road. Most are parked at the shops when I go by them.
 

galute

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Jun 28, 2010
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Location
Bald Knob AR
I guess it depends on your location but those prices sound really high to me. I had a new well drilled about 3 years ago. 140' deep, upgrade pump from 1/2 to 3/4 hp. Tanks, pump, wiring, hole all in 3100 bucks. That even included about 60' of solid rock.
 
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uncletater

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Oct 6, 2011
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Location
China Grove, NC
I would love to come in at 3100. But I am doubting that it will be that low. We are trying to find local companies (within 10 miles) Hopefully this will help with cost and support the local guy.
 

Crown Imperial

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Jun 13, 2014
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436
Location
SE Florida
May one ask why you are converting from city water to well?
I would have thought most people have wells drilled where there is no city water available. Not the other way around.
The house I live in was on well water. First thing I did was eliminate it and hook up to city water. I got tired of the whole salt bags thing really quickly.
 

larry_g

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Apr 28, 2007
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16,894
Location
oregon
But where are you located? I am in NC and I would hope that this is a rater slow time for them. I really don't see many of the trucks running up and down the road. Most are parked at the shops when I go by them.

I've never quite understood this thinking. Fast or slow it still costs $*** to put that rig in the field and operate it. Casing, insurance, depreciation, fuel, wages, and OH costs are not cheaper just because it is the slow time of the year. It might be the slow time of the year because the wet soil conditions prevent the trucks from getting to the well location without building a road that would not be required is drier conditions.

In this country you will pay for a dry hole, and the filler to close it back up.

lg
no neat sig line
 
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uncletater

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Oct 6, 2011
Messages
500
Location
China Grove, NC
I've never quite understood this thinking. Fast or slow it still costs $*** to put that rig in the field and operate it. Casing, insurance, depreciation, fuel, wages, and OH costs are not cheaper just because it is the slow time of the year.

In this country you will pay for a dry hole, and the filler to close it back up.

lg
no neat sig line

Thanks.

This is good to know. I know that some trades around here do discount when things are slow just to keep busy. Example would be roofers work cheaper this time of year. But I don't thing I would want a roof dome in the winter.
 

kd3pc

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Aug 10, 2013
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Location
Northern Neck
you might want to ask them about the various casings?

I would also ask whether they put the "yard" back like it was prior to drilling. We had a lot of water runoff that really ticked off the neighbors....didn't rut anything. but he went off about all the water and the silt/mud.

In the states I have lived, the well had to be *** feet from the house and the septic and ....such. YOu might want to talk with the health department about those kinds of requirements. Or which ever agency writes the permits for a well..

I would also make sure the driller tests, or has the water tested, just for my peace of mind. In VA it was several hundred to get a real quality test. That then can tell you whether or which treatment you will need, or when the dozens of culligan people call you to sell you a system, you may not need.
 
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uncletater

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Joined
Oct 6, 2011
Messages
500
Location
China Grove, NC
you might want to ask them about the various casings?

I would also ask whether they put the "yard" back like it was prior to drilling. We had a lot of water runoff that really ticked off the neighbors....didn't rut anything. but he went off about all the water and the silt/mud.

In the states I have lived, the well had to be *** feet from the house and the septic and ....such. YOu might want to talk with the health department about those kinds of requirements. Or which ever agency writes the permits for a well..

I would also make sure the driller tests, or has the water tested, just for my peace of mind. In VA it was several hundred to get a real quality test. That then can tell you whether or which treatment you will need, or when the dozens of culligan people call you to sell you a system, you may not need.



Good point on the septic. Our future plan would the septic and leech field would be about 100 yards from where we would like to place the well.

I guess the well company will also make location suggestions and give us options. (hopefully)
 

Davefr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2010
Messages
11,849
Location
OR
I was hoping that you guys could help me out.

I am beginning the process of getting quotes on a well. I have never been down this road before and was wondering what I should be asking.

I have always been on city water so this is all new to me. I have spoken to the people around me and they all said thier wells range from 120 feet to 200 feet.

I assume that the company will quote digging x feet. Electrical hook up and pad for well. If they go deeper I guess I pay by the foot.

Any advice would be helpful. I really have no idea on what to expect. Cost wise I ham hoping to come in around 6 to 8 thousand.

thanks

Make sure you get it witched and ask the driller for the best witcher in your area.
 
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uncletater

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Oct 6, 2011
Messages
500
Location
China Grove, NC
Does witching really work?

Seems to me like a snake oil thing to get more money from the home owner. I will ask what they think. I bet I will get some strange looks. I do live in the bible belt.
 

southalabama

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Jan 10, 2011
Messages
5,541
Location
Brewton AL
I'd leave the witches for halloween

I've contemplated a well for use on the land. I do have "city" water.

The only thing that concerns me, is there is no guarantee at what level they hit water, if at all. I'm really not worried about not finding it. I can hit water by digging a post hole. What concerns me is the checkbook being open if they punch through a level of water, go deeper just to run the bill up. I guess the water well drillers I talked to talked to fast and weren't reassuring enough for me to pull the trigger.
 

Leaflessshadetree

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Aug 1, 2013
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Don't ask.
Just hitting water may not be enough. You want to have enough water (flow rate) also you don't want to have your well run dry (pretty common for some people, especially in the summer). You also will need to think about water quality and treatment.
 

Thumper68

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Joined
May 16, 2013
Messages
5,134
Location
Duluth MN
I have a friend who is a driller and up here you sign a contract for so many feet and then so much per foot after that, it includes casing and all the normal stuff, permit, pump, piping to the building and we have to have it tested by a qualified lab.

If your neighbors wells are at the 150 to 200 foot level and your land is similar to thiers then do your contract for 200, if the water comes in at 150 you lose, but if it is at 250 you win. The extra $$ per foot is what can kill you.
 

finn

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Mar 27, 2005
Messages
16,374
Location
The UP, God's country
I guess it depends on your location but those prices sound really high to me. I had a new well drilled about 3 years ago. 140' deep, upgrade pump from 1/2 to 3/4 hp. Tanks, pump, wiring, hole all in 3100 bucks. That even included about 60' of solid rock.

I paid $7500 15 years ago for a well 140 feet deep in sand in rural Upper Michigan. That was the lowest of 3 bids.

Prices are regional. What a well costs in Saudi Arabia, Alaska, Texas or anywhere but my county is irrelevant.
 
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uncletater

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Joined
Oct 6, 2011
Messages
500
Location
China Grove, NC
I have a friend who is a driller and up here you sign a contract for so many feet and then so much per foot after that, it includes casing and all the normal stuff, permit, pump, piping to the building and we have to have it tested by a qualified lab.

If your neighbors wells are at the 150 to 200 foot level and your land is similar to thiers then do your contract for 200, if the water comes in at 150 you lose, but if it is at 250 you win. The extra $$ per foot is what can kill you.

I am confused. If My contract states 200 feet and they go 250 wouldn't I have to pay for the extra 50 feet outside of the contract?
 

kbs2244

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Joined
Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
Check with the county building department.
They, or the health department, may have records of well depths in your area.
That will give you a starting point.
 

rburke65

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Joined
Nov 10, 2007
Messages
12,349
Location
Canfield, Ohio
Oh ya....the last 50' will be free........NOT! I can't believe that them folks are drilling for free. Daddy ever tell ya there is no such thing as a free lunch. I know over half the populous think there is but not in the private sector.
 
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gt3 racer

Active member
Joined
Mar 1, 2005
Messages
28
Location
St. Charles, Il
Find out if there are or have been increases in people having to re-drill deeper. In the western burbs of Chicago there are 3 aquifers(sp) health dept will not let you drill in the first, the second has a chance of going dry. Had personal experience with this. The third is at 600' plus, we are at 695' cost 22k 9 years ago.
 
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