My house's 23-year old pressure tank has had a bladder failure (Pro Source PS82T-T05, 35 gallon). When drained, the tank has no air pressure; after filling with air to 2 PSI less than the low cut off, after refiling, I get only about 2.5 to 3.0 gallons of water out of a basement laundry sink faucet between high cut off and low cut off. And a week later there will be no air pressure again as read from the fill valve.
I am considering replacing the pressure tank with a CSV setups, but from what I've read, a CSV is not recommended for my particular situation.
In addition to the well pump and pressure tank sending water to the home, between the pressure tank in my basement and the piping going up to the inside of the house, there is a "T" that also sends water to a 1,700 gallon cistern buried outside the house, with it's own jet pump, which is used by all the outside spigots for gardening.
Because our well has a low recharge rate of only about 1 GPM (well is 800 feet deep, pump* is 500 feet down, head is 100 feet down), we refill the cistern at about .75 GPM and this refilling is set by timer-activated solenoid for 16 hours per day. All garden irrigation is controlled by other timers set for every three days and the entire yard is done in two days with a day of rest for the cistern to catch up and fully refill. This setup has allowed the gardens to get the required watering AND for us in the house to never run out of water.
Given that we have multiple 16 hour days of .75 GPM water flow going into the cistern, plus whatever water we use inside the house, it is my understanding that a CSV setup is NOT appropriate as CSV setups require a minimum of 1.0 GPM for satisfactory operation.
I invite any and all questions, advice, suggestions and general wisdom regarding this.
Regards,
Ladd
*I'm not sure of the specs for the current well pump. The old pump was a Sta-Rite Signature 2000, model 5PHE02HL-02, Code 1J96P. I can find no information on this pump so I don't know what horse power it is, nor what is it's GPM.