Cary, Sorry, more questions. Please read through this stuff before you answer me. I have some direct questions, but I also am asking you to confirm that my understanding of how the system works is correct, or if I'm mistaken, please explain the mechanics of what I am misunderstanding.
So here is what I did yesterday before I sent the questions yesterday. I looked at the pressure gauge on my pressure tank. It was near 40 psi, so the pressure switch was close to being ready to turn on the next time i used a faucet. I turned on a faucet, and in about 15 seconds, the pressure dropped to the 40 psi kick-on point of the pressure switch. The switch contacts engaged and the pump turned on. I turned off the faucet, so now no water was being used in the house. I also have a pressure gauge installed in between the pump and the CSV, immediately before the CSV. When the pump tuns on, the pressure gauge before the CSV swings from 40 psi (the turn-on point for the pressure switch and pump) to approximately 150 psi, where it remains while the pump is running. When the pump shuts off, at 60 psi, the gauge before the CSV drops down to 60 psi, which matches the pressure gauge on the pressure tank.
So, when the pressure in the pressure tank drops to 40 lbs.....the turn-on point of the pressure switch.....isn't the storage area of the tank pretty much empty....like 10-12 gallons has been used to drop the pressure down to 40 psi? In your reply to me this morning, you said that with a 40/60 switch and the CSV set at 55 PSI the tank is 3/4 full before the CSV starts to work. Well, when the pressure switch kicks the pump on at 40 psi, I see the second pressure gauge that I have installed in front of the CSV immediately swing up to 150 psi, and I was thinking that this back pressure indicates that the CSV is actively doing something at that point....is that not correct? I don't have any water running in the house at this point, because I turned off the faucet as soon as the pump came on, so am I'm guessing that what the pump is doing is filling the pressure tank, and nothing else at this point, is that correct? So, if the tank was essentially empty when the pressure hit 40 psi, how did it become 3/4 full before the CSV started to work? As I said yesterday, I timed the run-time on the pump when it came on at 40 psi, and that was 200 seconds. What you said about the tank being 3/4 full before the CSV started to work, and with the 1 gpm bypass working, the 200 seconds of pump run time makes sense, if the tank was 3/4 full. But I don't understand how the tank became 3/4 full. The entire run time of the pump was 200 seconds.....from a reading of 40 psi on the pressure tank. So.....not understanding how the tank is 3/4 full at the 40 psi point.....it seems to me that 11-12 gallons is being pumped into the tank in 200 seconds, despite a 1 gpm restriction on the flow rate because of the bypass.
And one other question....let's say I have water running for 5-10 minutes in the house, like a shower head. The pressure tank drains, the pump kicks on, the CSV starts working and my pressure rises to 55 psi, where it holds constant with the pump continuing to run, and the CSV maintains that psi pressure. Could you please describe the mechanics and route of the water that is coming out the shower head at 55 psi? There, of course, is a tee on the pressure tank. The "top" leg (if looking at the letter "T", the leg that would be considered the horizontal leg), is connected on one side, in a straight line to the water line coming from the pump and the the main water line supplying the house exits out the other end of the horizontal leg. The "vertical" leg of the tee (if looking at the letter "T", the leg that would be considered the vertical leg) attaches to the pressure tank. When a faucet is open and the pump is running, is the water just shooting by the intersection of the horizontal leg and vertical leg of the tee and continuing to the open faucet? And if the open faucet is only demanding 2 gpm, does the CSV close down so that only 2 gpm is going past the valve? So, does the tank only fill once the the water to the faucet is shut off? If what I am describing here is indeed what happens, then I go back to my question about how does the tank become 3/4 full so that once the water faucet is shut off, only 1/4 of the tank remains to be filled?
Thank you.