02-03-2021, 10:37 PM
The installation is at a Church. We have a shallow well pump connected to a driven well point into the aquifer. There is plenty of water but frequently the pump/well could not keep up with demand. To have ample reserve, the pump's 1" NPT discharge increases to 1-1/2" copper connecting three 118 gal. pressure tanks before reducing to a couple of 1" and 1-1/4" branches. When the softener was added downstream from the pressure tanks it created a new bottleneck, basically eliminating any benefits of having a reserve.
I asked our "water treatment contractors" if they honestly thought their tanks plumbed with 1" PEX along with a dozen or so PEX-B 90*'s could provide enough flow for 13 toilets, 9 sinks, a commercial kitchen and a 2 bedroom house. They agreed the treatment should be before the tanks.
Everything was disconnected and relocated. The tanks, pump, pipes were cleaned and flushed and re-connected. Got many compliments on the new layout and quality of workmanship; including some from those contractors. They showed up today as scheduled to do their part of the re-install. Everything is good until the installer calls this afternoon and tells me it's all hooked up but it should be installed after the expansion tanks! Their system won't back-flush correctly. Now their only advice to fix is to add a check valve and another expansion tank before their system. This is where I ask for advice. Their system is connected to a 1" tee above and below a 1-1/2" ball valve. I would prefer to not re-work the 1-1/2" copper if possible. Any and all suggestions are appreciated.
I asked our "water treatment contractors" if they honestly thought their tanks plumbed with 1" PEX along with a dozen or so PEX-B 90*'s could provide enough flow for 13 toilets, 9 sinks, a commercial kitchen and a 2 bedroom house. They agreed the treatment should be before the tanks.
Everything was disconnected and relocated. The tanks, pump, pipes were cleaned and flushed and re-connected. Got many compliments on the new layout and quality of workmanship; including some from those contractors. They showed up today as scheduled to do their part of the re-install. Everything is good until the installer calls this afternoon and tells me it's all hooked up but it should be installed after the expansion tanks! Their system won't back-flush correctly. Now their only advice to fix is to add a check valve and another expansion tank before their system. This is where I ask for advice. Their system is connected to a 1" tee above and below a 1-1/2" ball valve. I would prefer to not re-work the 1-1/2" copper if possible. Any and all suggestions are appreciated.
Sign at N.E. Vocational School Cabinetmaking Shop 1976, "Free knowledge given daily... Bring your own container"