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Feb.13,2010This is a one only shot of the boys that drilled the well for us now adding the piping for the water and electric connections. The yellow piece of hardware is the pressure flow switch that will activate the well pump when a tap is opened. It also can shut down the pump if no flow is detected to save the pump motor.pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Almost finished but this is the view of the piping both water and electric.pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Once it's all connected the boys made a quick test to be sure the pump would operate and ran it to see how much flow we had. They ran the pump a good 30 minutes with no shortage of water.pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010I'm holding the pressure switch that will operate the pump control. I saw no brand name or where it was made and the install booklet disappeared before I could find it. But I know it will start the pump at about 20 psi and stop it at about 55 psi.pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Another view of the pressure control showing the built on pressure gauge. Nice to have.pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010The area after the well is almost finishedpklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Here the creww is connecting the pvc piping. No yellow for the electric part just blue for all of it. I was not thrilled with the electric piece of the work and I will make "my" changes soon now that we have the system operatingpklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Day 3 they crew came back with the Franklin 1 hp pump and control, the automatic pressure switch and several lengths of blue PVC. They wired up the pump and attached the blue pvc in 4 meter lengths and dropped the pump down the hole. pklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010Then about 25 or 30 meters of pvcpklongballFeb 26, 2010
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Jan.30,2010The bore is capped with a steel pipe fitting and then more pvc to the controlpklongballFeb 26, 2010
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