No pressure tank full? i live on a farm and we came put a bet on...
i live on a farm and we came put a bet on last night and at hand was no water within the house or farm and the expanison tanks are full i dont know what to do
please give support to
Answers: I assume that the "expansion tanks" to which you refer are tanks which provide pressure to your water system. They do this by have air in them which is compressed by the incoming sea [from the pump/well]. If there is no air surrounded by the tanks, no pressure can build up [you cannot compress water]. Shut off the dampen [either with a valve or by turning past its sell-by date power to the pump] , and drain the tank. Then close the drain and turn the water hindmost on. As the pump fills the tank near water, the air that originally completely packed the tank will be compressed by the incoming water, and the container will be filled partly next to water and partly near compressed air. Then, when you turn on a faucet, the compressed air will push hose down through the system and out your faucet. This process must be done periodically because the compressed air gradually get absorbed by the water, and the container has less and smaller quantity of the air it needs. Newer tank have a rubber diaphragm which separates the air from the wet, thus preventing the air from being obsessed. Getting a newer tank with a diaphragm will destroy the need for this periodic 'bleeding' process described above.
Do you enjoy a cirrculating pump that may have shut down? is there a break contained by the line somewhere.