ckucia
Well-known member
Not sure I like this setup, but it's what we have.
Well head is off to the side of the driveway.
There's a buried water line and electrical conduit that come out of the ground through the slab in the garage near the breaker box. Next to that is a pressure tank which has the well controller on a stalk.
Water lines for the house come out of the slab next to the pump line, but over the winter they froze so I had to run a temporary water line with heat line and insulation attached to keep the water flowing. The heat line circles the bottom of the pressure tank and runs along the entire supply line from the slab to the house.
I forgot to heat the little stalk with the controller on top, and that froze a few times, so now I have a little space heater pointed at all that. It's quite a waste of electricity.
Our water has some iron in it and there's a filter assembly in the garage. Before I put that in line, I need to makes sure the filter isn't going to freeze. I looked it up and it's over $600 new - I don't want to have to replace it. We have a new Bosch dishwasher I'm ready to install and I'd rather put it on filtered water from the start.
Maybe someday I'll get all this stuff out of the garage and into a purpose-built well house near the head, but for now, it seems like a good course of action is to mount all of it in some sort of enclosure that I could insulate and heat.
Originally was just going to do something stick built, but then it occured to me that using concrete blocks (with insulation) might be just as easy and, if I filled them, the thermal mass might be useful to have.
Looking for others with a similar setup I could learn from.
The garage is unconditioned and currently not even weather tight, but that's a subject for another thread. Suffice to say, it gets cold in there. I also wouldn't mind moving this stuff further away from the breaker panel. Just seems like pressurized water right next to 220v circuits is bad idea.
The pressure tank is on a few blocks right now, but it also seems like getting it up off the floor, or insulating the floor, might be prudent. I wouldn't have to kneel on the ground to work on it either.
Any tips or suggestions?
Well head is off to the side of the driveway.
There's a buried water line and electrical conduit that come out of the ground through the slab in the garage near the breaker box. Next to that is a pressure tank which has the well controller on a stalk.
Water lines for the house come out of the slab next to the pump line, but over the winter they froze so I had to run a temporary water line with heat line and insulation attached to keep the water flowing. The heat line circles the bottom of the pressure tank and runs along the entire supply line from the slab to the house.
I forgot to heat the little stalk with the controller on top, and that froze a few times, so now I have a little space heater pointed at all that. It's quite a waste of electricity.
Our water has some iron in it and there's a filter assembly in the garage. Before I put that in line, I need to makes sure the filter isn't going to freeze. I looked it up and it's over $600 new - I don't want to have to replace it. We have a new Bosch dishwasher I'm ready to install and I'd rather put it on filtered water from the start.
Maybe someday I'll get all this stuff out of the garage and into a purpose-built well house near the head, but for now, it seems like a good course of action is to mount all of it in some sort of enclosure that I could insulate and heat.
Originally was just going to do something stick built, but then it occured to me that using concrete blocks (with insulation) might be just as easy and, if I filled them, the thermal mass might be useful to have.
Looking for others with a similar setup I could learn from.
The garage is unconditioned and currently not even weather tight, but that's a subject for another thread. Suffice to say, it gets cold in there. I also wouldn't mind moving this stuff further away from the breaker panel. Just seems like pressurized water right next to 220v circuits is bad idea.
The pressure tank is on a few blocks right now, but it also seems like getting it up off the floor, or insulating the floor, might be prudent. I wouldn't have to kneel on the ground to work on it either.
Any tips or suggestions?
