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Posted on Oct 24, 2009

Why is the pump cutting in so much - Jet Plumbing

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  • Posted on Oct 24, 2009
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Check your water pressure tank air pressure, turn off pump, drain off all water pressure and using a air pressure gauge check pressure at the schrader valve on the water pressure tank. It should be 2 lbs below pump cut-in pressure, they come factory charged at 30 PSI...works for most residential systems. Most likely you have a bad bladder in pressure tank.

Other possibles are a broken line between pump and pressure switch/pressure tank or bad pressure switch.If you have a pressure gauge on the water system(should have one near pressure switch) see if it is cycling at the right points if it is the switch is good. If pressure is dropping with NO water uasge in house you have a leak.

Most likely a bad pressure tank bladder is the problem.

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Photo (left) courtesy of a reader.
The nut atop the smaller spring in the pump pressure switch: this nut is used to narrow or widen the gap between the pump cut-on and pump cut-off pressures. This is the right-hand spring (and nut) in our photo).

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Which nut to turn in the pump pressure switch control, and which direction to turn it, are usually visible on a label inside the pressure switch cover. Above we show photos of a common Square D water pump pressure control switch (Schneider Electric) and the label with pump control adjustment details. [Click to enlarge].
Here are Example Pump Pressure Switch Adjustment Instructions from Square -D Understanding how pump pressure control switches work and which way to turn which of the two nuts in the control can be confusing.
On a Square-D Pumptrol® 9013FSF-2 pump pressure switch, for example, Square D tells us that we
  • Turn the Range Nut #1 (the larger spring and nut) clockwise (to the right or "down") to raise [both] cut-on and cut-off pressures. This is "tightening the nut down" against the spring. ("Rightie-tightie, leftie-loosie" as Mara Gieseke says to her kids). Thanks to reader Rise for this clarification.

    In other words, adjusting the pressure on this spring shifts the whole operating range of the switch up or down, but keeps the difference between cut-in and cut-out the same, whatever it happens to be (typically it's about 20 psi from the factory.)

    If you want the pump to turn ON (cut-in) sooner
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    If you want the water pump to turn ON (cut-in) later, that is, at a lower water pressure, turn the nut counterclockwise or "looser".

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    If you want the water pump to turn OFF (cut out or cut-off) at a higher water pressure, turn this nut clockwise or "tighter".

    If you want the water pump to turn OFF (cut out or cut-off) at a lower water pressure, turn this nut counter clockwise or "looser"

    Here is why the small nut is called the "Differential"
Keep reading at LINK
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