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I don't know what the correct answer is, but I always turned ours off if it would be unused for that length of time (I think that only happened twice.) I drained the pressure tank each time. This was as much to protect the house as the water system...I didn't want some kind of leak occur and flood the house.
I started with absolutely nothing. Now, thanks to years of hard work, careful planning, and perseverance, I find I still have most of it left.
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Location: Regina Saskatchewan Canada
Yes, you can turn it off that long. Yes, depressurise the system.
Care to share some reasons you’ve heard not to?
Blackhat
Bad experiences come from poor decisions. So do good stories.
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Location: Indiana
I have turned mine off for up to 6 months at the cabin. No problems.
As Neil explained the pressure is within the small 3/4" to 1" line, between your pressure tank and the check valve. Not the 4"-6" drilled hole. You most likely have a submersible pump with a check valve in the pump so water is held in the pipe all the time. Even if you were to lose the pressure in the pressure tank there is water sitting in the pump and line.
It should prime itself and pump up when you restart it.
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A couple points. A well is a hole in the ground. Casing is the pipe sleeve that keeps it from collapsing back in on itself. A 340 ft well should have 320 plus ft of casing with a section of screen on the bottom to make 340 feet. Screen size depends on flow and was settled when the well was drilled. No changing screen or casing now.
Perhaps the 37 foot number is the drop pipe to the pump? A bit unusual for a well that deep and the pump that shallow but certainly not impossible.
The pump has a check valve at the top of itself where the drop pipe is connected. It prevents the water from the house draining back down into the well. Even if that leaks a bit, the pipe stays full to normal water table. The drop pipe can’t be empty below water level, and even if it was, it would need several hundred feet of head pressure to collapse it. Think of a straw in a glass of water.
If the pump isn’t running, nothing is moving so no concerns about damage there. If the water is really nasty, you may need to manually cycle any water treatment equipment you have after turning things back on. Unplug that equipment while the well is turned off.
Any other questions or concerns, fire away.
Blackhat
Bad experiences come from poor decisions. So do good stories.
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Location: Pacific ocean now much further away!
When we lived in Hawaii, I shut the well down anytime we were gone more than a week.
Never had a problem.
VH07V