I'm wondering about using the Cycle Sensor to run my jet pump (which is refilling a tank) from my low yield well.
Might it be possible to set a somewhat higher threshold than the 'dry run' condition which I abhor due to loss of prime? ( 300 feet of 2" suction, 25 foot well, etc.) My purported 'rationale' follows:
At first, the well has recharged and the suction is less negative, the flow rate is higher and thus the current might be higher, (with more water being raised from -5psi to +60)
As i draw down the well volume, the suction pressure goes to a more negative value,
(let's say with the pump discharging through a ~PRV or CSV into an open tank),
(more work for the pump to raise from -10psi to +60, but the venturi is becoming less efficient faster, and the throughput decreases faster than linearly)
Perhaps the current will then go down below my elevated 'dry run' threshold, and the CS would shutdown for a delayed restart maybe 15 minutes later, to have less than 100 cycles/day.
If this worked, it would be an adaptive way to cycle the pump which would not exceed the well yield ,
if I wait long enough between cycles so that the startup flow surge doesn't overpump immediately , in the first 10 seconds.
I'm sold on the Cycle Sensor, but just wondering what to expect from it before I order.
Also, does the Dry Pump detection require current continuously below threshold 10 seconds?
Does the threshold have 'hysteresis', where the current must first exceed the threshold prior to detecting subthreshold current?
Before I go spend half a day testing, how reflective of GPM throughput is the jet pump current? I imagine the inefficiency of the jet relative to a submersible would make this approach harder to do with a jet pump.
I'm paying $0.35 for my kwh, so, the intermittent operation seems attractive vs continuous 24 hr operation of a 1 HP jet throttled to 0.75 gpm.
Also, speaking of $0.35/kwh, what is the power supply current consumed by Cycle Sensor unit?
Thanks,
John