Westonium
Silver Member
Apologies in advance for the long post, but I want to include enough info for useful advice:
My plumbing was done by a man that never bothered to learn plumbing 101. I have copper -steel connections all over the place, and a main line made of PVC that even says right on the pipe "NSF - DW" (not safe for drinking water).
One of the things I fixed was a junction manifold that had cheap valves in it that were dying awfully fast. Because I also disconnected 3 lines that fed a pasture at higher elevation (all of which had ruptures in the pipes) I now have a lot more pressure coming in to the system when the well pump runs.
The pump house is 650 feet away, and 75-100 feet lower than the house. There is no pressure tank in the pump house, but there is an 80 gallon tank inside the house.
The pressure from the pump is causing one of the water heater safety pressure relief valves to trip. There is a LOT of pressure coming up.
There what appears to be 2 pressure switches for the pump, but I've no idea how to adjust them. I removed the cover from one, and see that there are 2 springs, one larger, one smaller and that adjustment can be made to the tension of these springs.
The pressure meter is shot (gosh you think maybe all the copper in the line from the steel-copper-steel connections could be the culprit?) and replacing it means tearing apart the plumbing in the pump house. I am going to do this anyway, but I don't intend to do it mid-winter.
Finally the question: How do I adjust the pressure switch(es) so that my plumbing isn't going to blow apart.
I can make a pretty educated guess that it is >125 psi, maybe about 150.
I had "loseless" under-sink RO water filtration system that was supposed to pump the rejection water back into the hot line, and the pressure was causing multiple seal failures because it was trying to pump into a system already over-pressurized.
HELP!
I just to get through winter.
My plumbing was done by a man that never bothered to learn plumbing 101. I have copper -steel connections all over the place, and a main line made of PVC that even says right on the pipe "NSF - DW" (not safe for drinking water).
One of the things I fixed was a junction manifold that had cheap valves in it that were dying awfully fast. Because I also disconnected 3 lines that fed a pasture at higher elevation (all of which had ruptures in the pipes) I now have a lot more pressure coming in to the system when the well pump runs.
The pump house is 650 feet away, and 75-100 feet lower than the house. There is no pressure tank in the pump house, but there is an 80 gallon tank inside the house.
The pressure from the pump is causing one of the water heater safety pressure relief valves to trip. There is a LOT of pressure coming up.
There what appears to be 2 pressure switches for the pump, but I've no idea how to adjust them. I removed the cover from one, and see that there are 2 springs, one larger, one smaller and that adjustment can be made to the tension of these springs.
The pressure meter is shot (gosh you think maybe all the copper in the line from the steel-copper-steel connections could be the culprit?) and replacing it means tearing apart the plumbing in the pump house. I am going to do this anyway, but I don't intend to do it mid-winter.
Finally the question: How do I adjust the pressure switch(es) so that my plumbing isn't going to blow apart.
I can make a pretty educated guess that it is >125 psi, maybe about 150.
I had "loseless" under-sink RO water filtration system that was supposed to pump the rejection water back into the hot line, and the pressure was causing multiple seal failures because it was trying to pump into a system already over-pressurized.
HELP!
I just to get through winter.