Water Pump Pressure Switch
I own a large acre property and am having some plumbing issues. I’ll try and explain this best I can.
The Old System:
Water was pumped out of the well, through a pressure tank, a holding tank, and then a couple hundred feet up a hill to a 5000 gallon metal tank. From here the water was gravity feed back down to where it was needed. This was a closed system. What I mean by this is that once the tank was full, the pump would shut off. There is no electricity where the tank was. The pressure switch at the pump itself controlled the on/off of the pump in the well. (I think anyway. Bottom line is that something controlled when the pump came on and off with no problems)
The New System:
Basically the same as before except that the upper gravity tank is now 1500 gallons and has a pressure relief valve/overflow. This is now an open system. Now there is nothing to tell the pump to stop pumping. The pump keeps pumping and the upper tank fills up and right out the top of the overflow. I tried tinkering with the existing pressure switch, but it just keeps on overflowing. There is still no electricity to the upper tank, just an in and out hose.
Here is the info on the existing pressure switch (as printed inside the cover)
Pumptrol
Square D 9013FSG 2
SER. B
Can I somehow use the existing pressure switch with this new tank? If so, how? If not, what do I need and where can I find such a device?
Special Notes:
Again, there is no electricity at the upper tank and won’t be feasible to install. I need something to control the pump at the pump itself, not at the upper holding tank.
I can’t bypass the overflow/pressure relief on the upper tank with a float valve or something of the sort. I already tried and the building permit people said no way.
I want the pump to stop pumping when the tank reaches the 1500 gallon mark and then turn back on when the tank reaches the 1000 gallon mark, and then fill up to the 1500 mark again. These numbers are not set in stone; this was just my best guess as a way to run the system.
The pump pumps approx 22 GPM up the hill and into the tank.
Any help you can provide for this situation would be great. Let me know if you need any additional information.
Comment on jlisenbe's post
I know. I happen to be revising through my work so there is no harm..
Haha