For those new to the whole well thing: Good pump guys are BUSY. If you move into a house with a well for the first time, find a good pump guy BEFORE you have issues--pay them to do an evaluation and make a record of what's there so they know what to bring if an emergency comes up and what was done weird or badly originally, and keep their contact number handy. When something eventually goes haywire, you will be miles ahead in getting it resolved. Similar with septic pumping guys for the other end of the water system BTW.
The customer dumping chlorine in the well is making things worse. Chlorine causes the manganese to drop out of solution. You can use chlorine for iron and manganese treatment but only in small controlled doses. Best thing for him to do is get a filter that contains Katalox which will take out manganese and iron.
You ROCK! Great job! If I was that customer, having that beautiful red truck + trailer + excavator roll up must be an amazing site for someone that has NO WATER. And all that work from one guy, in 2 hours and 15 minutes with 95 degrees and humidity? Crazy.
How ironic! I have a condition called Meniere's disease (an inner ear condition causing tinnitus, vertigo, discomfort) I had to take manganese suppliments to help with the symptoms. I moved to a community where they're wellhead produced manganese and had to do yearly water main flushing. The 14 years I lived there, I didn't need the suppliments. I now live in an old house in Northern Ontario (Canada) that has a shallow, dug well with a jet pump setup. Nicest water ever! But, I now have to take the manganese suppliments again! You do great work....Keep on keepin on!
I worked with a lady that had Menieres years ago, and that was interesting stuff to learn about, and what debilitating symptoms it can come with. How fascinating about the difference in water making such a difference for you. Just goes to show sometimes we make it more complicated than it needs to be
The Folks around here have been raised on well water, I've helped about 6 people pull out their pump some just a dry well one didn't have the spacers on the pipe and wires so it was swinging in the breeze and wore the insulation off 2 of the wires and shorted it out, an old wheel on an a frame and a quad just need enough room to drive the quad far enough to get the pump to the top
Greetings from Sweden. My pump blew fuses and I it was stuck. I only got the wire, hose and cable out. Pump is still down there. A new pump was put a little above the old pump. It was 165 feet deep. Pump, hose and cable cost about $2000 for just the material. It was a good pump though (Grundfos). I changed from a three phase to a 1 phase pump so the new diameter of the pump is just about three inches. Fits better in the hole.
I had a problem with my well. I had two different plumbers come out to fix it. The first guy insisted my well pump was bad and that I needed a new one (a few thousand dollars). The 2nd guy actually pulled the pump up, found the wiring problem and told me my old pump was a quality product and that it would be silly to replace it. At the time, we had owned the house at last 10 years. I have no idea how old the pump is. Still working like a champ four or five years after the plumber came out.
I have been doing wells for 50 years and here in PA, we put a torque arrester every 10 ft and a check valve next to the pump in case a pebel or something else gets stuck in the built-in check valve.
Many years ago my pump went bad when I was down with the flu. Even with a friend coming over to help, it was a huge struggle to do what needed to be done, and my well is only 80 feet. A couple of years ago I had a nasty bout of COVID. That was immeasurably worse than the flu that I was suffering when I pulled the well, and the brain fog is very real. I suffered from it for well over a month. The fact that you were out pulling and fixing a well by yourself only a couple of weeks after testing positive speaks volumes to your work ethic and dedication. You are to be commended. Well done. Thank you for sharing this.
One guy uses a lawn tractor to pull the whole pipe and pump out. He says that if something gets stuck it's easy for you to keep pulling and bust stuff especially using an excavator. Just saying because it seems an awful big deal to bring an excavator to somebody's property.
As a kid my dad absolutely refused to pay for municipal water. Hey, he was old school, and a practical man. He was also correct, with this ridiculous consumer society we've all helped create. My point is that I gained a lot of water well experience all those years ago, and still maintain one of the old wells we used back then. Dang that was fifty years ago! Very nice to have a well for gardening and car washing and such things. Anyhow, my point really was YOU DID A MAN'S WORK! Excellent! The old well I'm using doesn't need anything right now, but you've got me ready to pull the pump and check everything just for the sake of knowing! Now that's how you sell a product! Dad also taught me maybe the most important thing I ever learned in this life though too. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it!" I love an opportunity to pass that little piece of wisdom on, but of course, that same practical man who I lucked out and had as a father also taught me the value of maintenance. I would hire you, based on this video alone young man.
I'll never need a well, but couldnt turn this video off. I like watching people work, in a knowledgeable manner, sorting through issues and getting a positive result. Plus you do a great job presenting things on video. Well done.
Sorry about the covid. I've had it 3 separate times. The last one took my taste and smell away for a year and replaced it with only being able to smell sulfur compounds. About 95% normal again. Those little bugs kill you energy level. Makes you feel like a zombie. Loved the video. Real people like you make the world livable for all of us.
Same here, it's a real bite. Gave me the worst chills and fever I ever had and continued issues with my health. I feel lucky to have survived though as some didn't make it. I had the sulpher taste thing for months where everything I ate tasted like rotten eggs. Gruesome.
if you wear a mask you wont get covid, you dont need to risk not being able to smell or taste food. not getting covid is totally preventable and easy. kn-95s/n-95s does a great job and i have never got covid ever, everyone that i know has gotten it at some point because they are stupid. i remember one thanksgiving family came over and one was "positive" lol everyone tested positive the two days later after that except me because i understood the protocols and was able to apply them in a effective way. there are people with long covid four years on and the symptoms never went away lol google it. "properly follow proper protocols" lol but it works
Great work . First the diagnosis, then the lift with multiple 20 yard laps back and forth , change out , pressure sw replacement , all on the heels of a covid bout , in that heat ! Hats off to you man .
took me a week to recover from COVID. I had nightmares during covid and couldn't eat for a week I lost about 40 50 lb only had hot soup I was able to put down my throat lots of ginger ale/water
I had to have my stand pipes replaced up here in Minnesota this spring. We had a dry winter. Very little snow, so it was easy to get to the Red Head. There are two brothers who went their separate ways a few years ago. This is the third time in 40 years that I needed to do this. One brother still uses galvanized pipe. I went with the other brother who uses 20 foot sections of Schedule 80 PVC and stainless steel couplers. I also had the 40 year old pump replaced along with all the wire. This area has a high iron content. When we turned on the pump it looked like oil coming out also. One thing that amazed me was that the water quality improved immensely. The iron has almost disappeared. I redid the pressure tank and the flow is excellent. I like watching how the wells are done down south.
You are a true craftsman, we had a new pump put in but our well is only 40 feet deep here in Florida. The two guys did a great job but I can appreciate your work by yourself. Don’t forget your seatbelt.
Glad you’re recovering. The Covid brain fog is very real and unexpected. Covid had me in bed for about 5 days. Took about two more weeks before I felt like a functional human being again. Take care of yourself and don’t push too hard!
Moved into my place November 22, it had set empty 10 years, and the pressure switch was stolen off the system. Went to the local Ace hardware and asked the very helpful lady who owned the store to recommend a pump service. The best thing i ever did was replace the switch tank and pump motor along with a new water softener system since North Florida has notoriously hard water. Money well spent, and i have a relationship with a reputable pump service. Never under estimate word of mouth advertising, i want to use the guy everybody recommends, not some blank slick advertisement.
Your knowledge is spot on. I'm glad I tuned in to your channel to learn something about something I don't know about just in case I am ever ending up with a well on my property I'm learning a whole lot, you're number is in my book
Did well work for years and seen quite a bit of stuff. Never seen one where pump was on bottom. Common sense not used. Better to install a storage tank and pump slower into it if well not productive enough than to lower the pump. I found 2 wells on my own property (which has city water). Both were marginally productive but was able to slow pump into a 2500 gal tank for storage and use in garden when needed. Normal pumping would run pump dry with manual reset so I had to valve the output down to a trickle. Takes 3 days to fill the 2500 gal tank at trickle but 2500 gal is a months worth of water so I took a marginal well and made it quite usable. In fact, if needed, it could be used for whole house use instead of city water. There are many solutions but putting pump on bottom is not one of them.
@@aday1637 pumps at the top of the well can be used for shallow wells only. Submerged pumps are the only option for deep wells. Deep wells are expensive, but if that is where the water is, you are stuck with a deep well.
Very Commendable you doin a 1 Man + 2 helper job alone in very Hot humid energy Draining weather + still Covid effects Recovering !! .....Rambunctious energetic Youth but You gotta take care yourself from these complex Virus diseases that Need lots rest & Down time for best possible recovery.....
Don't bet on it. It was documented that a LOT... I mean 90%+... of people who got SARS2 (the actual name of the virus) had no symptoms whatsoever even with the relatively strong strain in Spring/Summer 2020. You most likely have had SARS2, just without severe symptoms.
66 here and never had it and I've been tested multiple times before I has medical procedures. Really surprised the results all came back negative. I remember in Nov of '19 before 'Rona went global I was the sickest I've ever been in my life for two weeks. I honestly thought I was checking out in the beginning of it. I've asked to be tested for antibodies since then and none of the doctors I've had to see for other stuff, or my primary doc would order it. I suspect I had CV19 but I may never know.
Chlorine eats rubber, that's why bladder tank broke. One or two small capfuls of chlorine is all that is needed once or twice a year. Regards from South
Man, this is my first time seeing your channel and videos, and the moment I saw your face, I knew that no, you are *NOT* over covid yet. You look exhausted, and not just from the heat. Cut your workload in half, and move slower for another two weeks, then start ramping back up. And yes, the Brain Fog is real. That's going to be with you for a while, but fortunately, you do a lot of physical work, which is one of the treatments. If the brain fog doesn't improve over the next month, ask your PCP about off-label treatments using N-acetylcysteine (NAC) and guanfacine. Those are showing very good results for neurological impairment from covid.
You're right about that, when I had my trouble with COVID the coughing and trouble breathing kept me awake and the no energy meant I was struggling with a lot of basic stuff. It sure isn't fun. Glad you're feelin better though.
The hyperventilation I experienced for 2 weeks after I came down with covid kept me unable to sleep. I'd drift off due to exhaustion then jerk awake gasping for air. A trip to the emergency room did not good. Doctors didn't know about the hyper. at the time and thought I needed a CPAP. Pure awful, crazy illness & still on/off ailing.
Great vid, Philip. There's no substitute for experience. I had covid in May for the first time. There was a few days that I was on the verge of being hospitalized because I couldn't figure out how to do the most normal, everyday things. I'm an electrician in my regular life. When I went back to work after 8 days, I realized I was only functioning at 40-50%. Had to have someone check all my work. Mistakes aren't an option with electricity. It took a month or more to feel normal.
I had a similar experience last year when I got it myself. I ended up taking some time to do some other work the boss had for me, he was very understanding and put me to work doing simpler tasks while I recovered. I felt so dumb doing that kind of work but hey, do what you gotta I guess. It took me a little over 2 weeks to get back to something closer to 'normal' I feel for you, that fog truing to keep your head wrapped around what's going on... troubleshooting felt impossibly frustrating for a while.
My well was done in 86 and has never needed any maintenance other than cleaning the filter in the house water shot seventy feet in the air when the water was drilled out and the drilling rig shook and bounced until the guy jumped off of the truck ! 1650 deep and was a spring for five minutes after the bit was removed from the casing seventy five feet of solid granite was the last material that came out with the drill it was a perfect aquifer hit the operator said !
Every video you do I watch you make connections at the well head free air. Having done dozens of repairs and feeds this drives me crazy as an electrician. Run pipe for the wire and bring it up into a PVC Jbox. Install a strain relief connector appropriate to the cable. Inspectors fail well heads frequently for such issues here in New York. Further, not installing a simple black button connector on the input and output side of the pressure switch is another fail. They only cost $0.10 each and can be installed without even removing the UF. Other than those gripes I learned allot from
Is he even qualified to do electric connections? Agree that open air connection being dangerous. Who's responsible in case of third party electric shock?
Interesting video especially for someone like myself who's never seen anything about well systems. I definitely appreciate your diagnostic skills and decisions to replace the pump and pressure switch. 👍👍
A few years ago I dropped my pump 15 feet and had it about 1ft off the bottom (sand). I got a bit of grit at first, but that way the pump had 8-10 feet of water on top of it. Pumps 20gpm and the water level did not move. That kept me going a few years. Last year I had to put in a new well. Old well from 1970s was 59 feet. The new well is 160ft.
Great job, totally agree on changing the old pump, etc. Hope you get to feeling a lot better soon, some people that get Covid say they still feel weak, etc. for about 6 months. Get well and Take Care ! 👍
Hello Hello , haven't been on site since. A phrase I coined many years ago was. When I need help , I can not get it. When I don't need it , I can't get rid of it. The well on the farm had a lot of that manganese.
Around my area, we have natural gas in our wells. It makes like a slime that can actually plug in the pump and line so tight it takes a minimum of 3 to 4 strong farmers to pull one up to replace the pump every 6 to 10 years. I think I would rather have your manganese problems 😂😂. Great job actually diagnosing and fixing the problem for your customers.
i bought my house in 2006. The will gave up Jan 2007. I share my will with my neighbor so it was he. his 8 yr old son and I who had to pull it. Turned out the wire was bad. Dont know when the will was dug but it is 100 st deep with 40 ft of water. The wire that was on it was just 14g for a 220v pump. Replaced the wire with 10g, was not cheap even back then. @ yr later it went again. Pulled it out and found the old ump had given up. Got a new one and that was that. This time though I ran that pump for 2 weeks straight. Did not drop that will even an inch. M
That's great. *IF* you have the time, skill, and the specialized tools. Otherwise it pays to call in a competent specialist who has the tooling, skill and experience to do the job correctly. It doesn't make sense to spend a small fortune on specialized tools that are only useful for one thing that you will use once every ten years if that often. Do you happen to have the specialized hand tools, air soldering equipment special microscope, and assorted other stuff to repair surface mount electronics? Or the very special and particular test equipment needed to discover *WHICH* component needs to be replaced? I use it every day. You, as skillful as you are, probably wouldn't use it in ten years. I'd rather call in someone I trust to do a job if I have any doubts at all. Ultimately it saves me money.
This is the difference between someone who knows what they are doing and someone who thinks they know what they are doing. The one who knows what he is doing will take the job because he knows how to fix it, the one who thinks he knows how to do it will back out because he is afraid of the challenge.
Sorry to hear about your getting COVID and that your recovery has been such a struggle. Thank you for the videos as I've learned so much from many of them. The black manganese looked really nasty. Sometimes I wonder about the water quality from some of the wells such as this one and I trust there is some type of filtering in the system.
You can read voltage drop across the contacts by putting meter on ac voltage. You put both leads on same side of switch. One on line from breaker. Other on load to pump. 0 is good contact. 240v is open contact. Something in between high resistance
Some kind of wireless camera system would be great when you're working alone. Then, instead of having to keep stopping and going to check for the pump, you could be watching for it on a monitor.
Holy shit, buddy. Respect for dealing with that mess. My area rarely see wells deeper then 100 feet with the norm being 25-40 for those that just want water for irrigation and don't care about the staining as it's very heavy in iron. Running the deeper wells does help clean it up but it's still pretty iron rich. I hate pulling wells of any sort with the shallow sand points being my most hated. it's sometimes much easier to just pop in a new one... post hole auger style... lots of fun, lol. I remember trying to pull sand point with chains, black pipe, 2 15 tonne house jacks and 6 foot snipes... we had a piece of 1 inch black pipe inside an 1.5 inch pipe and it bowed them both which made us realize that if that energy went kinetic it could be very very bad. We just moved ten feet to the side the augured a new well.
As a contractor, aren't you concerned about the nasty state of the well? I was thinking about air lifting that shit out of there, or circulating it out with a mud pump.
@@traviseuler9082 it definitely could use some for of cleaning out for sure! I expressed that concern with the customer. He'll have to get funds available before that can be done.
Didn't know a darn thing bout pumps or wells BUT this 64yr city boy learned all kinds of stuff. Good work ethic & ty for upload. 💯👊🙏 Art P. Los Angeles CA
Chlorine and water combine to create hydrochloric acid, which the human stomach uses to break down food, and acids are what work best at dissolving minerals. And 90 degrees is not all that hot, but when combined with the humidity you have there it can really sap the energy out of you because you can not cool down properly. In the Texas Panhandle we regularly get temperatures in the 90 to 100+ degree range but our humidity is not near as high as yours is. Around here a 30% humidity reading is considered to be high.
Hydrogen chloride GAS mixed with water will form hydrochloric acid. Liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) does not mix with water and create hydrochloric acid
I have found that pump workers will conveniently anticipate that they will need more time than what is available (or billable)... especially on hot days, in order to quit before bringing it to completion.
Good job. Hope you're feeling better by now. Heats a killer especially when you been sick and just recovering. You're keeping your customers well satisfied and that will keep you all busy. God Bless you all for the great help you give your customers.
My mom's tank rusted through right at the full water level. It would leak for about 30 seconds every cycle, until the bladder came down and covered the pinhole. Took us a while to catch on to that one.
There’s so much wrong with that install of that well. There’s no torque arrester on the pipe near the pump to keep the pump from slapping the pipe into the casing when it turns on, there’s no well pit lock installed into the casing below grade, and there’s PVC pipe used to run water to the house. You’ll back to fix wire problems again bc it’ll chaffe on the casing, that PVC is gonna get brittle and fail, it’s just to susceptible to breaking if hit or cold. Black poly pipe is more forgiving underground.
Great job man! As a younger electrician back in the early 80's I worked for a company doing all their pump servicing and it was a great job! Difference was though all the installs in the area we worked in where steel pipe drops on pitiless adapters. Some of the wells we serviced where around a 1000' so pulling those setups required a Derrick truck, we rarely saw plastic drops, 20' lengths of pipe made for some long days. The area we worked in was pretty remote and many of the jobs where several hours driving time. Winters were especially challenging as when temps got down into the -30 range everything freezes up pretty quickly. Great memories and a great job at the time - still Thank Larry Churchill at Northern Pump Supply for the learning opportunity that he gave me! Cheers Mike 🇨🇦
Reminds me of the plumbing that was in my house when I got it. "New" PEX all over. The whole idea with PEX is USE ONE PEICE! Whoever did the plumbing put at least 11 tees/elbows where they didn't need to be just in ten feet from a water heater to kitchen directly above. Just as bad on the cold side. I just cut it out and used a single peice...it's both easier and cheaper to do it that way!
Well done. I’ve never seen a well setup like that with the flexible poly pipe. I’m out west and our wells are 20’ sticks of pvc with couplers. Check valves every 100’. My well is 525’ with static water at 410’ and that’s considered shallow. Can’t DIY any of it really. Too heavy. Need a crane. Water is extremely hard and mineralized. Eats pump heads for sure.
Awesome job that you have done we will be praying for you that you have a speedy recovery from covid that can be a nasty virus hope you get to feeling better soon God bless my friend stay safe out there in this heat drink plenty of fluids
Glad to see u back to wrk. How do u treat the manganese of the pipe, pressure wash? Its good to take a look at the whole pipe, i never like splicing..always a wk point..take care of yourself..
Are there not devices like a duty timer that could be installed in the house on a well pump circuit to detect and stop things like short stroking, excessive running, excessive current, etc.? Seems like a pretty simple device from an electrical engineering standpoint.
Something special about watching someone work who knows exactly what they’re doing.
I've watched a number of videos of this gentleman. He is knowledgeable, experienced, and generally first class. His community is lucky to have him.
The craftfolk that choose to show their work are the ones I want to hire.
For those new to the whole well thing: Good pump guys are BUSY. If you move into a house with a well for the first time, find a good pump guy BEFORE you have issues--pay them to do an evaluation and make a record of what's there so they know what to bring if an emergency comes up and what was done weird or badly originally, and keep their contact number handy. When something eventually goes haywire, you will be miles ahead in getting it resolved. Similar with septic pumping guys for the other end of the water system BTW.
i have on hand a new replacement gauge, wire, switch, pipe, clamps, fittings, pump, and tank. the big box store is 1/2 hr. away
I just realized how close he is to me! I've got 3 wells, very possible they drilled them!
Would u consider hiring a hard working new yorker??
@@MichaelPelestano-it4ym Now. Everybody knows that 'New Yorker' and 'hard worker' create an oxymoron! (I am kidding you in a big way!)
The customer dumping chlorine in the well is making things worse. Chlorine causes the manganese to drop out of solution. You can use chlorine for iron and manganese treatment but only in small controlled doses. Best thing for him to do is get a filter that contains Katalox which will take out manganese and iron.
Even ordinary Birm will do the job. I used Birm for years at my place and got about eight years out of it.
You ROCK! Great job! If I was that customer, having that beautiful red truck + trailer + excavator roll up must be an amazing site for someone that has NO WATER. And all that work from one guy, in 2 hours and 15 minutes with 95 degrees and humidity? Crazy.
"Oil that is, black gold, Texas tea..."
I was humming about Jed the millionaire when I read your post
*Let's move to Beverly 😂* *yeehawww 😂😂😂*
@@user-rz5di8fv9xMore banjo required in that segment of the video.
Californy is the place they outta be
How ironic! I have a condition called Meniere's disease (an inner ear condition causing tinnitus, vertigo, discomfort) I had to take manganese suppliments to help with the symptoms. I moved to a community where they're wellhead produced manganese and had to do yearly water main flushing. The 14 years I lived there, I didn't need the suppliments. I now live in an old house in Northern Ontario (Canada) that has a shallow, dug well with a jet pump setup. Nicest water ever! But, I now have to take the manganese suppliments again! You do great work....Keep on keepin on!
Is your real name Niel Young?
I worked with a lady that had Menieres years ago, and that was interesting stuff to learn about, and what debilitating symptoms it can come with. How fascinating about the difference in water making such a difference for you. Just goes to show sometimes we make it more complicated than it needs to be
Do you mean magnesium?
Wear ear plug when showering !
Good job. My pump guy left me without water 7 years ago, other pump companies wouldn't come out for 3 months. You can be our pump guy. 😅😂😅😂
You still don't have water after 7 years? DDDDDDDAAAAAAAAANNNNNNNGGGGGGGGGG you are a trooper.
The cost of not helping yourself.....
The Folks around here have been raised on well water, I've helped about 6 people pull out their pump some just a dry well one didn't have the spacers on the pipe and wires so it was swinging in the breeze and wore the insulation off 2 of the wires and shorted it out, an old wheel on an a frame and a quad just need enough room to drive the quad far enough to get the pump to the top
Two years for me. Ihs just put it in for free! Ill have water again in a couple days!!! Woohoo@@E85BETTY
Greetings from Sweden.
My pump blew fuses and I it was stuck. I only got the wire, hose and cable out. Pump is still down there. A new pump was put a little above the old pump. It was 165 feet deep. Pump, hose and cable cost about $2000 for just the material. It was a good pump though (Grundfos). I changed from a three phase to a 1 phase pump so the new diameter of the pump is just about three inches. Fits better in the hole.
I had a problem with my well. I had two different plumbers come out to fix it. The first guy insisted my well pump was bad and that I needed a new one (a few thousand dollars).
The 2nd guy actually pulled the pump up, found the wiring problem and told me my old pump was a quality product and that it would be silly to replace it.
At the time, we had owned the house at last 10 years. I have no idea how old the pump is. Still working like a champ four or five years after the plumber came out.
Hope you feel better soon. Rest as much as you can and drink tons of water. Pulling for you!!
First time I’ve ever seen a well fixed. We have a well it’s good to know a little more about it. Good job guy 👍
I have been doing wells for 50 years and here in PA, we put a torque arrester every 10 ft and a check valve next to the pump in case a pebel or something else gets stuck in the built-in check valve.
Many years ago my pump went bad when I was down with the flu. Even with a friend coming over to help, it was a huge struggle to do what needed to be done, and my well is only 80 feet. A couple of years ago I had a nasty bout of COVID. That was immeasurably worse than the flu that I was suffering when I pulled the well, and the brain fog is very real. I suffered from it for well over a month. The fact that you were out pulling and fixing a well by yourself only a couple of weeks after testing positive speaks volumes to your work ethic and dedication. You are to be commended. Well done. Thank you for sharing this.
Covid ain't no joke for the folks it killed and for the folks it affects.
problems like that always strikes when ur the most busy or sick.
Vitamin D.
One guy uses a lawn tractor to pull the whole pipe and pump out. He says that if something gets stuck it's easy for you to keep pulling and bust stuff especially using an excavator. Just saying because it seems an awful big deal to bring an excavator to somebody's property.
It must be going around again I had it over the weekend
Dude, you rocked it by yourself. Thanks.😊
As a kid my dad absolutely refused to pay for municipal water. Hey, he was old school, and a practical man. He was also correct, with this ridiculous consumer society we've all helped create. My point is that I gained a lot of water well experience all those years ago, and still maintain one of the old wells we used back then. Dang that was fifty years ago! Very nice to have a well for gardening and car washing and such things.
Anyhow, my point really was YOU DID A MAN'S WORK! Excellent! The old well I'm using doesn't need anything right now, but you've got me ready to pull the pump and check everything just for the sake of knowing! Now that's how you sell a product! Dad also taught me maybe the most important thing I ever learned in this life though too. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it!" I love an opportunity to pass that little piece of wisdom on, but of course, that same practical man who I lucked out and had as a father also taught me the value of maintenance.
I would hire you, based on this video alone young man.
I'll never need a well, but couldnt turn this video off. I like watching people work, in a knowledgeable manner, sorting through issues and getting a positive result. Plus you do a great job presenting things on video. Well done.
Next thing you know, old Jed's a millionaire. Californy is the place he oughta be...
😂 Exactly what I was thinking.
I heard the Klampits moved out of Californy because it's too f'ing crazy. They moved back to Tennessee. 😂
Not nowadays 😂😂 run from California.
Did he load up his truck and move to Beverly? Hills, that is? If he has any sense he'll stay the hell outta there now!
@@StickySyrupEverywhereexcuse my ignorance as not from that area - but why is that ? Besides water contamination what are the other risks ?
Best Well Man on the internet.
It's a treat to watch a man who knows his business. 👍🏻
This guy is a good craftsman, worth his weight in gold!
Worth his weight in WATER!
Sorry about the covid. I've had it 3 separate times. The last one took my taste and smell away for a year and replaced it with only being able to smell sulfur compounds. About 95% normal again. Those little bugs kill you energy level. Makes you feel like a zombie. Loved the video. Real people like you make the world livable for all of us.
Same here, it's a real bite. Gave me the worst chills and fever I ever had and continued issues with my health. I feel lucky to have survived though as some didn't make it. I had the sulpher taste thing for months where everything I ate tasted like rotten eggs. Gruesome.
if you wear a mask you wont get covid, you dont need to risk not being able to smell or taste food. not getting covid is totally preventable and easy. kn-95s/n-95s does a great job and i have never got covid ever, everyone that i know has gotten it at some point because they are stupid. i remember one thanksgiving family came over and one was "positive" lol everyone tested positive the two days later after that except me because i understood the protocols and was able to apply them in a effective way. there are people with long covid four years on and the symptoms never went away lol google it. "properly follow proper protocols" lol but it works
Yep, I had the same covid taste for about a year and a half. It sucked bad, couldn't eat much of anything.
I had Covid 3 times, too, but without any long lasting effects. I'm in my late 60s.
FLCCC ivermectin protocol also help long covid
Job well done. You know your stuff !
Cool to see a neighborhood company on CZcams, doing a stand up job💯
Great work . First the diagnosis, then the lift with multiple 20 yard laps back and forth , change out , pressure sw replacement , all on the heels of a covid bout , in that heat !
Hats off to you man .
took me a week to recover from COVID. I had nightmares during covid and couldn't eat for a week I lost about 40 50 lb only had hot soup I was able to put down my throat lots of ginger ale/water
@FordExplorer420 I've been drinking green tea for about 3 weeks, it seems to help me. That & Advil for the headaches
I had to have my stand pipes replaced up here in Minnesota this spring. We had a dry winter. Very little snow, so it was easy to get to the Red Head. There are two brothers who went their separate ways a few years ago. This is the third time in 40 years that I needed to do this. One brother still uses galvanized pipe. I went with the other brother who uses 20 foot sections of Schedule 80 PVC and stainless steel couplers. I also had the 40 year old pump replaced along with all the wire. This area has a high iron content. When we turned on the pump it looked like oil coming out also. One thing that amazed me was that the water quality improved immensely. The iron has almost disappeared. I redid the pressure tank and the flow is excellent. I like watching how the wells are done down south.
Hans Premium water filtration systems get out all of that manganese and other crap no problem. I love my RO system. You do very good work❤
Good Job, nicely explained. I used to have a well pump. I now have city water. Thank goodness.
Very impressive. Great job. We lived with a well in 1955. I believe it was about 250' deep
Always kind of wondered how those wells worked. Now I'm a professional Thanks to youtube 😆
I don't know anything about well pump systems - this vid was fascinating and I'm going to watch more
You are a true craftsman, we had a new pump put in but our well is only 40 feet deep here in Florida. The two guys did a great job but I can appreciate your work by yourself. Don’t forget your seatbelt.
You Good .
Man Charlie Brown , you treat your customers righf.
Don’t push too hard Philip. Get over the covid without hurting yourself. 👍🏻
Glad you’re recovering. The Covid brain fog is very real and unexpected. Covid had me in bed for about 5 days. Took about two more weeks before I felt like a functional human being again. Take care of yourself and don’t push too hard!
@@matth5309 It affected me almost identical to this!
Year and a half still getting brain fog for days and bowel issues to boot. Comes and goes without forewarning. Very disconcerting.
Did u take the shot?
@@BoStaggs-cr5lc nope. Never will either. Both my parents did, both had complications to some extent
@@aday1637vaxxed sheep
Great job. Thanks for showing the entire job.
Moved into my place November 22, it had set empty 10 years, and the pressure switch was stolen off the system.
Went to the local Ace hardware and asked the very helpful lady who owned the store to recommend a pump service. The best thing i ever did was replace the switch tank and pump motor along with a new water softener system since North Florida has notoriously hard water. Money well spent, and i have a relationship with a reputable pump service.
Never under estimate word of mouth advertising, i want to use the guy everybody recommends, not some blank slick advertisement.
Your knowledge is spot on. I'm glad I tuned in to your channel to learn something about something I don't know about just in case I am ever ending up with a well on my property I'm learning a whole lot, you're number is in my book
Great job cobbie and heat 🥵 good man. Knows what hard work is ....we all need to do our part ...keep love alive
Did well work for years and seen quite a bit of stuff. Never seen one where pump was on bottom. Common sense not used. Better to install a storage tank and pump slower into it if well not productive enough than to lower the pump. I found 2 wells on my own property (which has city water). Both were marginally productive but was able to slow pump into a 2500 gal tank for storage and use in garden when needed. Normal pumping would run pump dry with manual reset so I had to valve the output down to a trickle. Takes 3 days to fill the 2500 gal tank at trickle but 2500 gal is a months worth of water so I took a marginal well and made it quite usable. In fact, if needed, it could be used for whole house use instead of city water. There are many solutions but putting pump on bottom is not one of them.
@@aday1637 pumps at the top of the well can be used for shallow wells only. Submerged pumps are the only option for deep wells. Deep wells are expensive, but if that is where the water is, you are stuck with a deep well.
Very Commendable you doin a 1 Man + 2 helper job alone in very Hot humid energy Draining weather + still Covid effects Recovering !! .....Rambunctious energetic Youth but You gotta take care yourself from these complex Virus diseases that Need lots rest & Down time for best possible recovery.....
Far out. I care about him too, from that short video.
I'm 65 and never had COVID. My wife and kids had it twice each. I hope I never get it. Great job Phillip!😄
Don't bet on it. It was documented that a LOT... I mean 90%+... of people who got SARS2 (the actual name of the virus) had no symptoms whatsoever even with the relatively strong strain in Spring/Summer 2020.
You most likely have had SARS2, just without severe symptoms.
almost 66 no covid either..
Lucky duck.😊
66 here and never had it and I've been tested multiple times before I has medical procedures. Really surprised the results all came back negative. I remember in Nov of '19 before 'Rona went global I was the sickest I've ever been in my life for two weeks. I honestly thought I was checking out in the beginning of it. I've asked to be tested for antibodies since then and none of the doctors I've had to see for other stuff, or my primary doc would order it. I suspect I had CV19 but I may never know.
I came here to say exactly what you said!!!@@christopherkidwell9817
Chlorine eats rubber, that's why bladder tank broke. One or two small capfuls of chlorine is all that is needed once or twice a year.
Regards from South
Usually chlorine is only put in the well if it is disturbed. Never heard of adding it every year.
Man, this is my first time seeing your channel and videos, and the moment I saw your face, I knew that no, you are *NOT* over covid yet. You look exhausted, and not just from the heat. Cut your workload in half, and move slower for another two weeks, then start ramping back up. And yes, the Brain Fog is real. That's going to be with you for a while, but fortunately, you do a lot of physical work, which is one of the treatments. If the brain fog doesn't improve over the next month, ask your PCP about off-label treatments using N-acetylcysteine (NAC) and guanfacine. Those are showing very good results for neurological impairment from covid.
You're right about that, when I had my trouble with COVID the coughing and trouble breathing kept me awake and the no energy meant I was struggling with a lot of basic stuff. It sure isn't fun. Glad you're feelin better though.
The hyperventilation I experienced for 2 weeks after I came down with covid kept me unable to sleep. I'd drift off due to exhaustion then jerk awake gasping for air. A trip to the emergency room did not good. Doctors didn't know about the hyper. at the time and thought I needed a CPAP. Pure awful, crazy illness & still on/off ailing.
@@aday1637 Yeah, my lungs have never been quite right since. It's a really dismal thing and I feel for anyone who catches it.
First time seeing you but I got to tell you I love it. You got a new fan. Definitely learned something here today. I love this kind of stuff
"up through the ground came a-bubblin' crude.
Oil that is, black gold, Texas tea."
Great vid, Philip. There's no substitute for experience.
I had covid in May for the first time. There was a few days that I was on the verge of being hospitalized because I couldn't figure out how to do the most normal, everyday things. I'm an electrician in my regular life. When I went back to work after 8 days, I realized I was only functioning at 40-50%. Had to have someone check all my work. Mistakes aren't an option with electricity. It took a month or more to feel normal.
I had a similar experience last year when I got it myself. I ended up taking some time to do some other work the boss had for me, he was very understanding and put me to work doing simpler tasks while I recovered. I felt so dumb doing that kind of work but hey, do what you gotta I guess. It took me a little over 2 weeks to get back to something closer to 'normal'
I feel for you, that fog truing to keep your head wrapped around what's going on... troubleshooting felt impossibly frustrating for a while.
My well was done in 86 and has never needed any maintenance other than cleaning the filter in the house water shot seventy feet in the air when the water was drilled out and the drilling rig shook and bounced until the guy jumped off of the truck ! 1650 deep and was a spring for five minutes after the bit was removed from the casing seventy five feet of solid granite was the last material that came out with the drill it was a perfect aquifer hit the operator said !
A shinning knoght in a red truck 🚒! Great work!
Great videos, Very easy to understand what the "F" is going on. Thanks for taking the time to explain.
Nice work Phil. That well could stand to be fracked just to clean it out.
Every video you do I watch you make connections at the well head free air. Having done dozens of repairs and feeds this drives me crazy as an electrician. Run pipe for the wire and bring it up into a PVC Jbox. Install a strain relief connector appropriate to the cable. Inspectors fail well heads frequently for such issues here in New York. Further, not installing a simple black button connector on the input and output side of the pressure switch is another fail. They only cost $0.10 each and can be installed without even removing the UF. Other than those gripes I learned allot from
Is he even qualified to do electric connections? Agree that open air connection being dangerous. Who's responsible in case of third party electric shock?
Interesting video especially for someone like myself who's never seen anything about well systems. I definitely appreciate your diagnostic skills and decisions to replace the pump and pressure switch. 👍👍
Outstanding. Educational and very satisfying. You kick ass young man. I blame your Dad. 💪🏼
A few years ago I dropped my pump 15 feet and had it about 1ft off the bottom (sand). I got a bit of grit at first, but that way the pump had 8-10 feet of water on top of it. Pumps 20gpm and the water level did not move. That kept me going a few years. Last year I had to put in a new well. Old well from 1970s was 59 feet. The new well is 160ft.
Get well and stay strong ! Thanks for sharing !!
Great Job Dude!!!
Great job, totally agree on changing the old pump, etc. Hope you get to feeling a lot better soon, some people that get Covid say they still feel weak, etc. for about 6 months. Get well and Take Care ! 👍
“Texas Tea”! 😂😂
Hello Hello , haven't been on site since.
A phrase I coined many years ago was.
When I need help , I can not get it.
When I don't need it , I can't get rid of it.
The well on the farm had a lot of that manganese.
Around my area, we have natural gas in our wells. It makes like a slime that can actually plug in the pump and line so tight it takes a minimum of 3 to 4 strong farmers to pull one up to replace the pump every 6 to 10 years. I think I would rather have your manganese problems 😂😂. Great job actually diagnosing and fixing the problem for your customers.
sorry about recovering from Covid in the heat.....hanging in there is impressive
Excellent work done by a knowledgeable craftsman. Well done.
I would have liked to see the pump change out. Very impressive work. Learned a lot from the video. Thank you.
i bought my house in 2006. The will gave up Jan 2007. I share my will with my neighbor so it was he. his 8 yr old son and I who had to pull it. Turned out the wire was bad. Dont know when the will was dug but it is 100 st deep with 40 ft of water.
The wire that was on it was just 14g for a 220v pump. Replaced the wire with 10g, was not cheap even back then.
@ yr later it went again. Pulled it out and found the old ump had given up. Got a new one and that was that. This time though I ran that pump for 2 weeks straight. Did not drop that will even an inch.
M
It isn't if you just. Don't. Have. The. Time. 🥲
That's great.
*IF* you have the time, skill, and the specialized tools.
Otherwise it pays to call in a competent specialist who has the tooling, skill and experience to do the job correctly.
It doesn't make sense to spend a small fortune on specialized tools that are only useful for one thing that you will use once every ten years if that often.
Do you happen to have the specialized hand tools, air soldering equipment special microscope, and assorted other stuff to repair surface mount electronics? Or the very special and particular test equipment needed to discover *WHICH* component needs to be replaced?
I use it every day. You, as skillful as you are, probably wouldn't use it in ten years.
I'd rather call in someone I trust to do a job if I have any doubts at all. Ultimately it saves me money.
Well, it looks like a good way to harvest manganese.
Awesome video. I hope you feel better soon. At 18:30 I noticed some of the elusive Electchicken droppings in the mud.
This is the difference between someone who knows what they are doing and someone who thinks they know what they are doing. The one who knows what he is doing will take the job because he knows how to fix it, the one who thinks he knows how to do it will back out because he is afraid of the challenge.
Sorry to hear about your getting COVID and that your recovery has been such a struggle. Thank you for the videos as I've learned so much from many of them.
The black manganese looked really nasty. Sometimes I wonder about the water quality from some of the wells such as this one and I trust there is some type of filtering in the system.
You can read voltage drop across the contacts by putting meter on ac voltage. You put both leads on same side of switch. One on line from breaker. Other on load to pump. 0 is good contact. 240v is open contact. Something in between high resistance
Some kind of wireless camera system would be great when you're working alone. Then, instead of having to keep stopping and going to check for the pump, you could be watching for it on a monitor.
Holy shit, buddy. Respect for dealing with that mess. My area rarely see wells deeper then 100 feet with the norm being 25-40 for those that just want water for irrigation and don't care about the staining as it's very heavy in iron. Running the deeper wells does help clean it up but it's still pretty iron rich.
I hate pulling wells of any sort with the shallow sand points being my most hated. it's sometimes much easier to just pop in a new one... post hole auger style... lots of fun, lol. I remember trying to pull sand point with chains, black pipe, 2 15 tonne house jacks and 6 foot snipes... we had a piece of 1 inch black pipe inside an 1.5 inch pipe and it bowed them both which made us realize that if that energy went kinetic it could be very very bad. We just moved ten feet to the side the augured a new well.
As a contractor, aren't you concerned about the nasty state of the well? I was thinking about air lifting that shit out of there, or circulating it out with a mud pump.
@@traviseuler9082 it definitely could use some for of cleaning out for sure! I expressed that concern with the customer. He'll have to get funds available before that can be done.
I love how bro is like "....Well, I guess we're" several times while working on a well.
Didn't know a darn thing bout pumps or wells BUT this 64yr city boy learned all kinds of stuff. Good work ethic & ty for upload. 💯👊🙏
Art P.
Los Angeles CA
Chlorine and water combine to create hydrochloric acid, which the human stomach uses to break down food, and acids are what work best at dissolving minerals.
And 90 degrees is not all that hot, but when combined with the humidity you have there it can really sap the energy out of you because you can not cool down properly. In the Texas Panhandle we regularly get temperatures in the 90 to 100+ degree range but our humidity is not near as high as yours is. Around here a 30% humidity reading is considered to be high.
Hydrogen chloride GAS mixed with water will form hydrochloric acid. Liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) does not mix with water and create hydrochloric acid
Definitely the best water mechanic on YT
I have found that pump workers will conveniently anticipate that they will need more time than what is available (or billable)... especially on hot days, in order to quit before bringing it to completion.
Good job. Hope you're feeling better by now. Heats a killer especially when you been sick and just recovering. You're keeping your customers well satisfied and that will keep you all busy. God Bless you all for the great help you give your customers.
Feeling well enough, excellent!!!
I see what you did there, well I think I did
Back in the day when I was a young carpenter? Two journeymen and a helper dug the foundation and built the whole dang house . That was work .
My mom's tank rusted through right at the full water level. It would leak for about 30 seconds every cycle, until the bladder came down and covered the pinhole. Took us a while to catch on to that one.
Woozy from Covid, smoothing the gravel in the driveway from the excavator, that, sir, is dedication to the customer!
I learned a LOT! I also have a manganese problem.
There’s so much wrong with that install of that well. There’s no torque arrester on the pipe near the pump to keep the pump from slapping the pipe into the casing when it turns on, there’s no well pit lock installed into the casing below grade, and there’s PVC pipe used to run water to the house. You’ll back to fix wire problems again bc it’ll chaffe on the casing, that PVC is gonna get brittle and fail, it’s just to susceptible to breaking if hit or cold. Black poly pipe is more forgiving underground.
I hope you get well soon. No pun intended. Lol. You definitely know what your doing. God Bless
Take care of yourself. Like your work.
When I got Covid it only bothered me for about 3 days but it did wipe me out.
Always learnin' ...A lot to learn with water...
You done a nice clean job ! Looks great.
Great job man!
As a younger electrician back in the early 80's I worked for a company doing all their pump servicing and it was a great job! Difference was though all the installs in the area we worked in where steel pipe drops on pitiless adapters. Some of the wells we serviced where around a 1000' so pulling those setups required a Derrick truck, we rarely saw plastic drops, 20' lengths of pipe made for some long days. The area we worked in was pretty remote and many of the jobs where several hours driving time. Winters were especially challenging as when temps got down into the -30 range everything freezes up pretty quickly.
Great memories and a great job at the time - still Thank Larry Churchill at Northern Pump Supply for the learning opportunity that he gave me!
Cheers
Mike 🇨🇦
Reminds me of the plumbing that was in my house when I got it. "New" PEX all over. The whole idea with PEX is USE ONE PEICE! Whoever did the plumbing put at least 11 tees/elbows where they didn't need to be just in ten feet from a water heater to kitchen directly above. Just as bad on the cold side.
I just cut it out and used a single peice...it's both easier and cheaper to do it that way!
Very informative video. I have City water at my house, but I have lots of friends with wells. It’s always been a mystery to me how these things work.
Well done.
I’ve never seen a well setup like that with the flexible poly pipe. I’m out west and our wells are 20’ sticks of pvc with couplers. Check valves every 100’.
My well is 525’ with static water at 410’ and that’s considered shallow. Can’t DIY any of it really. Too heavy. Need a crane.
Water is extremely hard and mineralized. Eats pump heads for sure.
Awesome job that you have done we will be praying for you that you have a speedy recovery from covid that can be a nasty virus hope you get to feeling better soon God bless my friend stay safe out there in this heat drink plenty of fluids
Glad to see u back to wrk. How do u treat the manganese of the pipe, pressure wash? Its good to take a look at the whole pipe, i never like splicing..always a wk point..take care of yourself..
Are there not devices like a duty timer that could be installed in the house on a well pump circuit to detect and stop things like short stroking, excessive running, excessive current, etc.? Seems like a pretty simple device from an electrical engineering standpoint.