Hello - thanks for all the good info on this forum! I get that a small tank is all you need for the house, but I'm wondering if a large low-pressure tank might work well for a geothermal HP? I'm building a new home and just drilled the well - 175 GPM with a 20' static head. My two-stage geo needs between 4.5 and 8 GPM (at just a couple of psi), and I'm estimating the house at 14 GPM (2.5 baths, DW, front-load washer, just the two of us). I'm thinking about putting in a 1/2 HP 25 GPM submersible to fill a large unpressurized tank to supply the geo, and a 1/2 HP booster with a CSV to supply the house at 50 psi.
My thinking is that when the house isn't using water, the well pump will fill the large tank, running at its pressure/flow efficiency sweet spot. When the geo comes on, it gravity feeds from the large tank. If someone opens a tap, the booster kicks on. If the well pump is currently filling the big tank, it just reduces the flow into the big tank to meet the house demand. If the well pump is off, it comes on with the booster, again running at its sweet spot, since whatever excess the house doesn't need goes into the big tank.
I think the big tank needs to be big enough to supply the geo for at least one complete heating/cooling cycle, and should only call for water when it's empty. That would minimize cycling while supplying the geo. And, any time the house calls for water when the big tank is less than full, the well pump would run at peak efficiency even if it's just supplying one sink in the house, because it's filling the large tank with the excess. If the geo empties the big tank, the well would kick on and refill it, again running at optimum efficiency. The only time the well pump isn't running at peak efficiency is when the geo tank is full and the house calls for water, at which point the CSV throttles the flow, reducing the power consumption of the well pump (although at a significantly reduced efficiency).
Am I thinking clearly? Not pretending to be any kind of expert, but trained as an electrical engineer and like to learn new things. Having a lot of fun designing this system for our new house. Thanks.