Eric Hammond wrote:I have a 6 gpm grundfos sqflex, its wired to 1000 watts of monocrystaline panels at 200 v DC. I leave it on all the time. It pumps to a 500 gallon tank that is open to the atmosphere, no pressure. Overflow from that tank runs to a pond. So everyday my tank is full and I pump 3000 ish gallons a day. From the 500 gallon static tank I have a shureflo on demand pump plumbed to a 20 gallon pressure tank. This gives us about 40ish psi of water pressure. This pump runs off my solar system from the house. Seems to be pretty efficient but noisy. What I think would be an ideal system and I will do when my shure Flo pump goes bad, is buy just a cheap 110 v a.c. well pump, they can be had on Amazon for less then 200 bucks. I would just lay the pump in the bottom of my 500 gallon static tank, and plumb it to the pressure tank and place a pressure switch on the pressure tank that runs the pump. Since your not requiring your well pump to pump into pressure it should be very easy on that pump, and the 110v pump in the static tank does not have to overcome 150 ft + of head pressure on it(depending on static water level), so I think you could run the pressure 50 60 psi easy and not be too hard on the pump. I feel like it would be a quiet robust system, and really pretty efficient. As you've found, the hardest part is getting the water out of the 500ft hole. Storing it on the surface is a better idea not only for efficiency for your batteries, but in case of mechanical break down. My friends well pump just quit. He had to come borrow water from me. If mine quits, I have a 500 gallon reserve to deplete to give me time to fix it. You could buy a new 1000 gallon septic tank and bury it, it would never freeze. My tank is in my shop.
Eric Hammond wrote:I've done tons of research into solar well pumping, as I'm sure you've found there are very very few of us ACTUALLY doing it, so I was super excited to see your post! If you need anything, let me know. I've spent a ridiculous amount of money on water, but I finally feel like I have a system that works for me and my family.
Best of luck!
Johnny Ainsworth wrote:
Eric Hammond wrote:I've done tons of research into solar well pumping, as I'm sure you've found there are very very few of us ACTUALLY doing it, so I was super excited to see your post! If you need anything, let me know. I've spent a ridiculous amount of money on water, but I finally feel like I have a system that works for me and my family.
Best of luck!
I found this well pump on Amazon which looks pretty good for what I want: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01A7S4Q0Y/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=A1Y4RBJHD0SC34&psc=1
It's rated for 25gpm, and with the cistern to the pressure tanks I'm only lifting the water about 7 feet so it shouldn't run for very long and with low amps.
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John C Daley wrote: As an Australian I am surprised at the depths you are going to for water.
Here we mainly catch it off roofs, I store about 300,000 Litres in tanks.
Is such a thing possible for you, my rainfalls 450 mm [18 inches] per annum
My opinions are barely worth the paper they are written on here, but hopefully they can spark some new ideas, or at least a different train of thought
John Duda wrote:Shoulda thought that one out longer. Seems like you need a larger well pump tank, or put any tank between your well pump and your house plumbing. Think of your hot water tank. It's in the line between your pump and your faucets. It's pressurized like anything else in your plumbing system. Any tank you put in the plumbing system will pressurize as well. So you need a larger tank and a timer that allows your deep well pump to run during the day.
Peter VanDerWal wrote:Man I'm glad I don't live in Colorado, I just glanced through their water rights laws, what a mess. Did you know that while you are now allowed to capture rainwater from your roof, you're only allowed to store 2 barrels (110 gallons) worth of it? That's kind of pointless.
You mentioned a creek. While it might be to difficult to get rights to the water in the creek, is it suitable for a micro-hydro setup? New federal laws make it much easier to get permits for micro-hydro installations.
David Baillie wrote:Great system details! Based on what you have laid out your system is well designed although as you noted a little light on the solar.
When I look at your stats I come up with another idea. Can you split up your pressure tanks? If you have valves at each tank try shutting one off at night. Ideally you will have shortened the pump runtime in half and lessened the hit your l16's are taking when they are at their most weakened. If a scenario like that works I might consider doing away with one tank completely or some solenoid valves on tank 2 for nightime shutout controlled by a timer. Yes you will create more run cycles on the pump but will probably add life to the batteries to compensate and will have minimal cost for new gear. If you switch to Nife batteries remember that their instantaneous discharge rate is lower then lead so size accordingly.
Cheers, David Baillie
Eric Hammond wrote:I've done tons of research into solar well pumping, as I'm sure you've found there are very very few of us ACTUALLY doing it, so I was super excited to see your post! If you need anything, let me know. I've spent a ridiculous amount of money on water, but I finally feel like I have a system that works for me and my family.
Best of luck!
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
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