“It seems like our well pump is operating nonstop.”
If this resembles your water system, there’s a professional description for it: “short cycling.” No sooner does the pump stop running, than it starts up again. It’s desperately trying to sustain pressure within the system.
Why? The well pressure tank, which contains water drawn from the well prior to use, has a problem. The precise issue depends on the type of water pressure tank.
Most likely it’s “waterlogging,” which happens in a bladder tank. These well pressure tanks, the most common model, store water in a bladder inside their metal shells. Surrounding air pushes on the balloon, keeping the water under pressure.
All is well until the bladder breaks … and the air pocket fills with water. Bye-bye, water pressure.
Homeowners in Atwater, it’s time to replace the tank … which means a call to Kelly James Service, the well water pressure tank experts in Atwater. They’ll install a new pressure tank the same day, and stop your well pump’s endless short-cycling.
Air spitting from faucets? It’s another symptom of a broken bladder. If the problem isn’t already serious, it soon will be.
Not all Atwater residences with well water systems have bladder tanks. Some use an air volume control tank, part of the well’s vertical in-ground pipe. The system employs bleeders, which allow a controlled volume of water into the pipe. The water creates an air pocket, which generates pressure when the pump cycles to push in additional water.
Problems start when these bleeders become stopped up over time, lowering the starting water level in the pipe. With less water, pressure in the system goes down. The pump cycles in a nonstop effort to provide more water to maintain required pressure, and keep the system operating.
A third type of well water pressure tank is made of galvanized metal, which annually. Typically installed in older homes, these tanks eventually leak. Similar to an air volume control tank, the well pump operates near-constantly to sustain pressure as the internal water level drops.
Galvanized and air volume control tanks can also be compromised by mineral accumulations. These impede water flow from the tank into the home. Low water pressure results. Again, replacement is the only viable choice.
Atwater residents: Tired of listening to your well pump run nonstop? Let Kelly James Service bring back the peace – not to mention water pressure – that you value. You’ll be amazed how short a time it takes them to stop your pump’s short-cycling.