... We also spliced the wires at the top of the casing & used a pitiless adapter which is saddle type fitting through the casing with an o-ring seal. Splicing the wires at the top of the casing made pulling the pumps easier which isn't uncommon due to lightening strikes...
Yes, I could just splice the wires at the top and this may be what I will have to do - I just need to either put them in a box or use water-tight splices.
As far as lightening, since Florida is sometimes called the "lightening capitol of the world" (we get more strikes then most places) this is one of the reasons that many well companies use the 3-wire systems (instead of the 2-wire) since that puts the control box with all cap actors and relays above ground and easy to replace. Lightening usually seems to take out the controller not the actual pump. However, with the 2-wire systems, the caps and such are down the well and the pump must be pulled after a hit.
As for the pitiless adapter, since we do not have the freeze worry, pitiless adapters are not common fare here. on many wells the casing extends above ground level with a well seal and the feed pipe connected to the drop pipe with a union.
Do you need 35 GPM or could you put in a smaller pump that would better match the flow of the well?
I have already revised this system to operate on the 35GPM and still cover without cycling the pump. I cannot make the zones any smaller since that would require running new wires and installing new irrigation clocks/controllers - not cost effective.
If I try to nozzle any smaller not only would I lose coverage, they only make the nozzles in certain usage amounts and I cannot change that. I need at least 35GPM on this system.
If it were a new install I would simply do a flow test and design/install the zones according to the delivery rate ... but, on an older, existing system you sometimes have to work with what there is and try to do the best you can to make it work.