I just built a new well house and my bladder tank recently failed so it seems a good time to consider all options before moving the “system” into the new well house. Here are the basics: my well is 520 ft deep, the pump is at 460 ft and the static level is 395 ft. My pump is a 240 volt, 2 HP, 10 gpm Sandhandler. The new well house is 15 ft from the well and the pipe from the well is 1 1/4” and a dedicated input to the tank, (ie., no tee’s or other connections.). The new system will have two dedicated output’s: a 176’ - 1 1/4” line to the house climbing 15 ft in elevation and a second dedicated line going through a reduced pressure backflow preventer to all the yard hydrants and irrigation systems on our 5 acre farm. After the tank the line runs through a sediment filter, an iron/sulfate filtration system and a water softener before branching off to the dedicated house and “yard” systems. I live in western Nevada and the water temperature exiting the well is a balmy 70 degrees and reaching upper 70’s before it make the uphill trek to the house; a perfect growing medium for iron bacteria and sulfates resulting in stinky water. The less water sitting in a warmer well house the better so the CSV and small tank may have some real advantages. I have 4 questions:
1. Is the CSV pressure adjustable? I will lose 7 1/2 psi going up the hill to the house.
2. Is there any issue with running the CSV system through the reduced pressure backflow preventer?
3. I have read many of your explanations on how the CSV works and am pretty familiar with centrifugal pumps as a retired fire engineer. What I do not understand is the “soft start.” If the pressure tank starts the pump when it hits the start up pressure, say 40 psi, doesn’t it slam the pump into gear as normal?
4. Finally, if the CSV limits the line pressure to 50 psi, how does the pressure tank reach the shut off pressure of 60 psi?