Crumm
Fordoholic
I am having pressure switch problems. When we purchased our house three years ago there were two pressure tanks in the basement. One looked to be 100 years old and the other one is a nice new looking blue one. A week ago the wife called me while I was out of town and informed me that the old one had sprung a leak When I returned home I removed the old tank and capped the line so now I only have one tank. The line to the old tank t-ed out where the pressure switch and pressure gauge are right next to where the line from the well comes in through the floor. The new looking tank is plumbed in about two to three feet on down the line from the pressure switch.
Next problem that arose a few days later was the pressure switch was constantly clicking the pump on and off like the switch was set at 40/40.5. I went and purchased a new 40/60 switch and it seemed to fix the problem.
Next day the pop-off on the water heater started leaking so I installed a new one and it now seems OK. I wrote it off to the domino effect of more pressure as I think the old switch was much lower than 60, at least it feels like it in the shower but the old gauge was broken so I don’t know what I had.
Now tonight the pressure switch started its crap again When the water softener was cycling the pump started coming on and off in 1 second increments until I went and turned on a faucet for a few seconds then all was well until the water softener did another function and it happened again. The switch seems to be getting a pressure surge when it turns on at 40 psi so it immediately shuts off thinking it has 60 psi but then it clicks back on when it figures out it only has 40. If a faucet or anything else is on things seem OK but a slight water draw will put the switch into fits.
Question : Is my pressure tank too far from the pressure switch or is the tank bad? How much pressure is the tank suppose to have in it? Like I said above the tank is two or three feet down the line from the switch so is this acceptable? I think my pump must be a high flow unit as I can flush both toilets, take a shower, run the dishwasher and do a load of laundry all at the same time so flow is not a problem. It seems as though you can flush a toilet or run a faucet for a quite a while without the pump kicking on so the pressure tank must be doing something but there is a problem.
Any ideas? I am getting tired of playing plumber every time I get home and my wife is about to stress out.
Next problem that arose a few days later was the pressure switch was constantly clicking the pump on and off like the switch was set at 40/40.5. I went and purchased a new 40/60 switch and it seemed to fix the problem.
Next day the pop-off on the water heater started leaking so I installed a new one and it now seems OK. I wrote it off to the domino effect of more pressure as I think the old switch was much lower than 60, at least it feels like it in the shower but the old gauge was broken so I don’t know what I had.
Now tonight the pressure switch started its crap again When the water softener was cycling the pump started coming on and off in 1 second increments until I went and turned on a faucet for a few seconds then all was well until the water softener did another function and it happened again. The switch seems to be getting a pressure surge when it turns on at 40 psi so it immediately shuts off thinking it has 60 psi but then it clicks back on when it figures out it only has 40. If a faucet or anything else is on things seem OK but a slight water draw will put the switch into fits.
Question : Is my pressure tank too far from the pressure switch or is the tank bad? How much pressure is the tank suppose to have in it? Like I said above the tank is two or three feet down the line from the switch so is this acceptable? I think my pump must be a high flow unit as I can flush both toilets, take a shower, run the dishwasher and do a load of laundry all at the same time so flow is not a problem. It seems as though you can flush a toilet or run a faucet for a quite a while without the pump kicking on so the pressure tank must be doing something but there is a problem.
Any ideas? I am getting tired of playing plumber every time I get home and my wife is about to stress out.