scesnick
Veteran Member
Well, actually I know a fair bit about how to raise the pressure but here is the problem I need help with.
Wifey and I are remodeling our house. I had a very nice tile shower built for her. It has four body shower nozzles, a regular nozzle and a hand held. Well, the pressure isn't enough to get the full performance out of this shower now since we added quite a few showerheads.
We have a well system. I have a 40 - 60 psi pressure switch on it. I turned up the switch and it is now roughly at 50-75 psi. This didn't seem to make much difference at all in the shower performance. ( this shower is on the first floor) Now, I did NOT add and air to my pressure tank as of yet. mostly because it was latewhen I tried this and the compressor not very portable. The pressure tank is still set at 38psi.
would not adding air to the tank really make that much difference? If not, how can I get this shower to perform the way we want it to? Inline booster maybe, but i can't seem to find an inline one that isn't over $500.00..
Wifey and I are remodeling our house. I had a very nice tile shower built for her. It has four body shower nozzles, a regular nozzle and a hand held. Well, the pressure isn't enough to get the full performance out of this shower now since we added quite a few showerheads.
We have a well system. I have a 40 - 60 psi pressure switch on it. I turned up the switch and it is now roughly at 50-75 psi. This didn't seem to make much difference at all in the shower performance. ( this shower is on the first floor) Now, I did NOT add and air to my pressure tank as of yet. mostly because it was latewhen I tried this and the compressor not very portable. The pressure tank is still set at 38psi.
would not adding air to the tank really make that much difference? If not, how can I get this shower to perform the way we want it to? Inline booster maybe, but i can't seem to find an inline one that isn't over $500.00..