steveo1o9
Well-known member
I know this isn't garage related but I am looking for some help. I am a first time homeowner (moved in last October) and have never lived anywhere that has had a well before. It has become very apparent that my well is short cycling like crazy. I got down into the crawl space to check out the pressure switch (40/60 switch) and bladder tank (32 gal) and found that during water usage the pressure gauge would show a drop from 60 to 40 psi almost instantly and start the well pump to catch back up. To me this indicated the pressure switch was operating as it should since the cut in and off were within range. Next I turned off the well and drained the tank from the nearest faucet (outside hose bib) best I could. Since the tank is under the house it is laying horizontally on the ground with no other way to drain it. The "empty" pressure was in the upper 50's not 38psi as it should have been. I released the air back to where it should be and turned the pump back on. After the tank filled I ran the water and everything operated as it should and no more short cycling. I went to check the pressure on the tank when filled and it spit water... To me the that pointed towards a failed tank, and after a few days the pump is back to short cycling again.
So now my dilemma is how to fix this. The tank in there now is Well-x-trol W203 which after reading the specs is not meant to be mounted horizontally. The manufacturer date on the tank is 2011 so I assume that this is the second tank since the build date of 2006. The biggest horizontal mount tank I can find is 20 gal. Per my initial well installation log from 2006 the measured pumping rate of the well was 30gpm, but the listed capacity of the 0.5 hp pump is 10gpm
... If the pump rate is truly the 30gpm theoretically I would need two 20 gal. tanks in series to meet the minimum 1 minute run time to fill the tanks.
Now I ask you, for the price should I just install 2 new tanks and call it a day? I have read that bladder tanks live short lives is areas with hard water and high iron content, which I have, so this will become a routine procedure I imagine. I have also been looking at the cycle stop valve setups which will cost about the same money to install. I am not sold on this setup yet and am not sure if it will even work for me if my pump rate is actually the 30gpm. When searching the web on the CSV setups you find the same few people raving about them which I find suspicious.
Sorry for the novel, but any insight would be greatly appreciated.
So now my dilemma is how to fix this. The tank in there now is Well-x-trol W203 which after reading the specs is not meant to be mounted horizontally. The manufacturer date on the tank is 2011 so I assume that this is the second tank since the build date of 2006. The biggest horizontal mount tank I can find is 20 gal. Per my initial well installation log from 2006 the measured pumping rate of the well was 30gpm, but the listed capacity of the 0.5 hp pump is 10gpm
... If the pump rate is truly the 30gpm theoretically I would need two 20 gal. tanks in series to meet the minimum 1 minute run time to fill the tanks.Now I ask you, for the price should I just install 2 new tanks and call it a day? I have read that bladder tanks live short lives is areas with hard water and high iron content, which I have, so this will become a routine procedure I imagine. I have also been looking at the cycle stop valve setups which will cost about the same money to install. I am not sold on this setup yet and am not sure if it will even work for me if my pump rate is actually the 30gpm. When searching the web on the CSV setups you find the same few people raving about them which I find suspicious.
Sorry for the novel, but any insight would be greatly appreciated.



