
Originally Posted by
Todd D
I don't have all of the specifics on the well. When I say 5 gpm well, perhaps as you say, it is 5 gpm recovery. The well was already drilled when we bought the property, and our contractor had the well driller install the pump, plumbing, etc up to and including the pressure tank. From conversations with him, all I can say is that he was told not to go above a 5 gpm pump. Now, if I hold a bucket under the incoming line into the cistern, it will fill at a 5 gpm rate. So, no, we didn't have enough water for a 3 bathroom house. We never actually ran out of water, but we ran down to a trickle from the shower head if the dishwasher, clothes washer, or 2nd shower/bath was running at the same time. The proposal from the well driller to add a 2nd 120 gal pressure tank and give us only 60 gallons more stored water (for around $1600) just didn't make sense.
Yes the 5 gpm well is the recovery rate of the well, that's all it can be. But you always have storage capacity in a well. The water level isn't at the inlet to the pump so you can pump more than just the same gpm as the recovery rate. If you have a 4" or larger diameter well you have a lot more water than 5 gpm. As to your low flow in the house, flow is dictated by the pressure and you could have increased the pressure very easily.
Since you are only getting 5 gpm out of an open pipe at the cistern, you have an undersized pump because even a 5 gpm pump should be delivering more than 5 gpm open discharge.
You also could have replaced the wet end of the pump, that's that part of a pump that is rated in gpm. You select which one based on the peak demand gpm the house requires at the psi you want to run the system at, THEN you select the hp to do the job. You DO NOT size a pump based on the recovery rate gpm of the well.
Now you have a rust problem in the 550 gallon cistern... depending on the iron content of the water it can create a lot of rust on the bottom. A correctly sized turbidity filter, that is not an iron filter as Birm or Filox is, would backwash with 50-75 gals every 6-8 days. You have more than enough water for that.
Why would anyone consider that water as "wasted" when we don't consider other water we use to improve our lives as wasted; like taking an extra shower, or a bubble bath, or watering lawn or plants that can't survive in the environment they are planted in unless they are watered constantly, washing vehicles, etc. etc. etc.?
Using disposable cartridges, even the largest, a 4.5" x 20", or a reusable bag filter, may require very frequent replacement or cleaning but no one can say how frequently, only experience will tell you. And once you replace a 4.5" x 10 or 20" cartridge, you very possibly won't want to do it again anytime soon.
Gary Slusser
22 yrs in water treatment and well pumps, 13 yrs helping people on the 'net to help themselves.
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