Well point eating pumps

Lanzz

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Bronze Supporter
Jan 28, 2021
165
Charlotte, NC
Pool Size
16000
Surface
Vinyl
Chlorine
Salt Water Generator
SWG Type
CircuPool RJ-45 Plus
Hey all - I have a vinyl pool in a pretty wet area - there is evidence that the liner floated in the past, but in the year I have owned the house, I have not had that issue. The pool has an 8 inch well point near the deep end - with a submersible automatic pump at the bottom - I had that pump replaced when I first moved in a year ago. Also, I just had a new liner installed this month and it looks great. We had almost 2 inches of rain on the weekend and when I went out to the well point (I check it a few times a week, it is usually dry or just a little water in the bottom...) It was full of steaming hot water. So - the pump must have overheated trying to move the water and failed. In a big hurry, I went and bought a cheap submersible pump and cleared the water out of the well point - it took about 3 hours. Then - I bought a 1/3 horsepower submersible automatic pump at HD. I put it in Saturday and it failed already today. Since the prior pump lasted a year - I cannot figure out what has change which is causing the replacement pump to last 5 days. I do know that the pump short cycles a lot - it pumps water out and additional water takes its place - until the area dries out. So - I don't expect the pump to last forever - but something seems amiss - and different. Any thoughts? (I put another new pump in just now - a Little Giant automatic submersible. It is working hard to get the water out and the liner looks fine} - but I really worry that there is something new going on.
 
Is the inlet to the pump clogged or restricted? Could it be resting in soft sand or mud causing a lack of flow?

If the pump is starved.for water it could easily over amp and burn up.
 
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Is the inlet to the pump clogged or restricted? Could it be resting in soft sand or mud causing a lack of flow?

If the pump is starved.for water it could easily over amp and burn up.
I poured some 57 gravel in the bottom of my sump and also invested in a good Zoeller sump pump with a stand to make sure it stayed out of the mud. It’s done very well, and stayed functional all winter even despite freezing Ohio weather.
 
Is the inlet to the pump clogged or restricted? Could it be resting in soft sand or mud causing a lack of flow?

If the pump is starved.for water it could easily over amp and burn up.
WJ - it put two small lengths of PVC in laying the bottom of the well point to keep it off the rocks and sand at the bottom. Seems like the constant on/off short cycles kill it - and I do not have a way to avoid those unless I go with a manual pump and let a lot of water accumulate and then operate the pump manually.
 
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I wish I had room for that pump, wgipe- I am limited to a pump that fits in a 8 inch pipe - so about 7.75 x 7.75 is about all that fits. I will see if they have a smaller version of that tank you got. :) I did just order the Hydro Check from Amazon - that is a great idea, because I will be able to control the on/off points to prevent the pump from short cycling - really great idea. I will try the Hydro Check for now with the current Little Giant pump in manual mode and when that dies, I will get something more robust.
 
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OK - here is my new setup - with the Hydro Check installed on a custom 3/4" pvc pipe setup with a check valve. Right now, connected to the new Little Giant pump with the auto start/stop removed. When this pump dies, I will get a better pump, but this seems like it will do the job for a while. First picture is before it went into the sump and the second one is looking down into it after installation.
 

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OK - here is my new setup - with the Hydro Check installed on a custom 3/4" pvc pipe setup with a check valve. Right now, connected to the new Little Giant pump with the auto start/stop removed. When this pump dies, I will get a better pump, but this seems like it will do the job for a while. First picture is before it went into the sump and the second one is looking down into it after installation.
Nice! I think you’ll be really happy with it.
 
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