Ever wonder exactly how much water you have left in your well pressure tank? Have enough for a shower? Flushing a toilet too?
I have a deep well and a pressure tank. I have a 40/60 PSI turn on/off switch. Typical. I have an emergency generator to operate the well pump but have to roll it out from the garage, fuel it, and connect the big cable. When the power goes out I'd just as soon ration my remaining water in the pressure tank rather than firing up the generator.
Assume you have a 44 gal pressure tank, fairly typical. Assume a 40/60 switch. Assume you live at about 1,500 ft above sea level where the atmospheric pressure is 14 PSI.
Boyle's Law says that the pressure times the volume of a gas is a constant. i.e. if you halve the volume the pressure doubles. But you have to use absolute pressure, the pressure that the molecules "feel", not what a pressure gauge shows (a tire with 30 PSIG (PSI gauge) has a true pressure of 44 PSIA (PSI absolute) which is 30 + 14 = 44.
PSIA = PSIG + 14 in this example. We have to use PSIA because obviously increasing a tire (or tank) from 1 PSIG to 2 PSIG doesn't cram the molecules together twice as much.
In a normal pressure tank set up you precharge the air bladder (when empty) to 2 PSI less than the switch turn on point. So with a 40/60 switch this is 38 PSIG. You now have 44 gallons of air at 38 + 14 = 52 PSIA. If you have 44 gallons of air you must have 0 gallons of water!
Now, assume the gauge reads 40 PSI and the pump is just about ready to come on.
If you have 40 PSIG you have 54 PSIA. The pressure has increased from 52 to 54 PSIA which is 1.04 times so the volume of air must decrease by 0.96, the reciprocal. 44 gallons X 0.96 = 42.4 gallons of air allowing 1.6 gallons of water. Yup, you have a whopping 1.6 gallons of water when your gauge reads 40 PSI. Not much.
Assume your gauge reads 50 PSI, half way between turn on and turn off. How much water? If you have 50 PSIG you have 64 PSIA. That's 1.23 times the empty 52 PSIA. So 1/1.23 = 0.81 and that times your 44 gallons is 35.8 gallons of air and 8.3 gallons of water (figures are rounded).
Lastly, assume you're lucky and your pump just turned off after reaching 60 PSIG before the power failed. What now? 60 PSIG = 74 PSIA and that's 1.42 times your empty tank air pressure. 1/1.42 = 0.70 and that times 44 gallons is 30.9 gallons of air leaving 13.1 gallons of water. That is the MOST that will EVER be in your 44 gallon tank! This surprises most folks.
Notice that your available water is not linear with pressure, i.e. the water you have at 50 PSIG is not the half way point between what you have at 40 or 60.
I actually installed an 86 gallon tank for this very reason. More available when the power goes out and reduces the on/off cycling of the pump. Even at that there's not a tremendous amount available. You can look up your own atmospheric pressure if you want to refine your calculations (if you're a nerd like me). At 5,000 ft. I have only 12.23 PSI of air above me.
Lastly, be aware that when you run out of water (at 38 PSIG in this example), it just STOPS, you get no notice. Sorry for the long winded dissertation. Just thought it might be useful info.
I have a deep well and a pressure tank. I have a 40/60 PSI turn on/off switch. Typical. I have an emergency generator to operate the well pump but have to roll it out from the garage, fuel it, and connect the big cable. When the power goes out I'd just as soon ration my remaining water in the pressure tank rather than firing up the generator.
Assume you have a 44 gal pressure tank, fairly typical. Assume a 40/60 switch. Assume you live at about 1,500 ft above sea level where the atmospheric pressure is 14 PSI.
Boyle's Law says that the pressure times the volume of a gas is a constant. i.e. if you halve the volume the pressure doubles. But you have to use absolute pressure, the pressure that the molecules "feel", not what a pressure gauge shows (a tire with 30 PSIG (PSI gauge) has a true pressure of 44 PSIA (PSI absolute) which is 30 + 14 = 44.
PSIA = PSIG + 14 in this example. We have to use PSIA because obviously increasing a tire (or tank) from 1 PSIG to 2 PSIG doesn't cram the molecules together twice as much.
In a normal pressure tank set up you precharge the air bladder (when empty) to 2 PSI less than the switch turn on point. So with a 40/60 switch this is 38 PSIG. You now have 44 gallons of air at 38 + 14 = 52 PSIA. If you have 44 gallons of air you must have 0 gallons of water!
Now, assume the gauge reads 40 PSI and the pump is just about ready to come on.
If you have 40 PSIG you have 54 PSIA. The pressure has increased from 52 to 54 PSIA which is 1.04 times so the volume of air must decrease by 0.96, the reciprocal. 44 gallons X 0.96 = 42.4 gallons of air allowing 1.6 gallons of water. Yup, you have a whopping 1.6 gallons of water when your gauge reads 40 PSI. Not much.
Assume your gauge reads 50 PSI, half way between turn on and turn off. How much water? If you have 50 PSIG you have 64 PSIA. That's 1.23 times the empty 52 PSIA. So 1/1.23 = 0.81 and that times your 44 gallons is 35.8 gallons of air and 8.3 gallons of water (figures are rounded).
Lastly, assume you're lucky and your pump just turned off after reaching 60 PSIG before the power failed. What now? 60 PSIG = 74 PSIA and that's 1.42 times your empty tank air pressure. 1/1.42 = 0.70 and that times 44 gallons is 30.9 gallons of air leaving 13.1 gallons of water. That is the MOST that will EVER be in your 44 gallon tank! This surprises most folks.
Notice that your available water is not linear with pressure, i.e. the water you have at 50 PSIG is not the half way point between what you have at 40 or 60.
I actually installed an 86 gallon tank for this very reason. More available when the power goes out and reduces the on/off cycling of the pump. Even at that there's not a tremendous amount available. You can look up your own atmospheric pressure if you want to refine your calculations (if you're a nerd like me). At 5,000 ft. I have only 12.23 PSI of air above me.
Lastly, be aware that when you run out of water (at 38 PSIG in this example), it just STOPS, you get no notice. Sorry for the long winded dissertation. Just thought it might be useful info.