Home Improvement Asked on June 6, 2021
I have a ½ HP 115V/230V 1PH 60Hz water pump (inside my house) that starts and stops hard. It is connected to a simple on/off pressure switch. The noise at startup is jarring. The quarter-turn ball valve shutoff between the supply and the pump has now sprung a leak twice (first on the output side, now on the input side) which leads me to believe there is at least some water hammer effect in play when the pump cuts out (there is now a tiny jet of water for 1-2 seconds from the input-side leak when the pump cuts out, otherwise a steady drip). The water supply coming in to the whole system is probably at around 5 PSI from a shallow well via several hundred feet of 1½" ABS pipe.
Here’s an attempt at a visual representation of the configuration:
shallow dug well
↓
200-300' 1½" ABS
↓
ball-valve shut-off
↓
check valve
↓
½ HP water pump
↓
/---------------------------------
↓ ↓ ↓
20 G pressure tank ↓ ↓
↓ ↓
1" cold water manifold ↓
↓
1½" outdoor supply line
↓
ball-valve shutoff
↓
frost-free spigots
Are these problems that would be alleviated by a soft start water pump? If so, can the current pump be adapted to a soft start system or is a pump that is natively soft start required?
I would say a soft start controller would not change the problem I have many booster pumps and the only thing a soft start would be good for would be throttling the pump. Centrifugal pumps create a large hammer action in how they work.
A expansion tank may be your best option. The quality of the valve may also be the issue I can warn you I had a irrigation pump that when throttled to 45hz with a VFD (can be used as a soft start) that frequency would tear up 4” irrigation lines I could run fine from 50 up to 70 hz and had no problems (below 40hz the motor would over heat)
There is cavitation at start up on the pump this is normal but a soft start won’t stop that. Some water filters can not be used without a pressure tank or expansion tank as the vibrations tear them apart.
I did see the comment on the water hammer arrestor that may work but I would think a 2-3 gallon expansion/pressure tank would solve the issue better than a electronic method.
I thought I should add most 120/240v pumps are capacitor start with a centrifugal clutch pulling them in. A soft start in this case would probably overheat the motor they are designed to spin up quickly and change windings or the cap depending on the type.
Answered by Ed Beal on June 6, 2021
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