Pressure Tanks for Crestline Wells
Your pressure tank is critical for protecting your well pump and maintaining steady water pressure. In Crestline, where wells produce 3-10 GPM from mountain granite and decomposed granite, proper tank sizing and maintenance is essential.
How Pressure Tanks Work
A pressure tank stores pressurized water so your pump doesn't have to run every time you turn on a faucet. Key benefits:
- Reduces pump cycling (extends pump life)
- Maintains steady pressure throughout the house
- Provides small reserve for power outages
- Critical for Crestline wells with yields of 3-10 GPM
Sizing Pressure Tanks for Crestline Wells
Tank size depends on your well's flow rate and household demand:
- Small households (1-3 people): 20-30 gallon tank for Crestline wells producing 3
- Medium households (4-5 people): 40-60 gallon tank
- Large households or farms: 80-120 gallon tank, especially if well yield is on lower end (3-10 GPM)
Pressure Tank Considerations for Crestline
Crestline wells in mountain granite and decomposed granite typically produce 3-10 GPM. This affects tank sizing:
- Lower yields need larger tanks to reduce pump cycling
- Higher yields can use smaller tanks but still need adequate capacity
- Water quality (low yields common, iron, moderate hardness) affects tank lifespan
Signs Your Crestline Pressure Tank is Failing
- Waterlogging: Pump cycles on/off rapidly (short cycling)
- Low pressure: Water pressure drops suddenly, especially upstairs or at far fixtures
- Tank leaking: Water pooling around base, rust spots
- No air cushion: Tank sounds "full" when tapped (should sound hollow at top)
- Pump running constantly: Tank can't hold pressure
Common Pressure Tank Problems in Crestline
Based on local conditions and mountain granite and decomposed granite:
- Freeze damage to pipes and tanks, low well yields (3-10 GPM), deep wells expensive, fire risk to infrastructure, power outages affecting pumps, aging vacation home wells
- Hard water (6-12 grains) causes sediment buildup inside tank
- Water quality issues (low yields common, iron, moderate hardness) can corrode bladder or tank interior
- Freeze damage in winter (elevation 4,800ft means cold temps)
Pressure Tank Maintenance
- Annual inspection: Check pre-charge pressure (should be 2 PSI below cut-in)
- Drain sediment: Especially important with Crestline water (low yields common, iron, moderate hardness)
- Check bladder: Bladder tanks last 5-10 years depending on water quality
- Monitor pressure switch: Should cut in around 40 PSI, cut out around 60 PSI
Tank Replacement for Crestline Wells
When it's time to replace your pressure tank, we:
- Size correctly: Based on your well's 3-10 GPM yield and household needs
- Choose quality: Bladder tanks from top manufacturers (Well-X-Trol, Amtrol)
- Professional install: Proper placement, piping, pressure settings
- Test thoroughly: Verify pressure, flow rate, pump cycling
Service area: Crestline Village, Valley of Enchantment, Lake Gregory area, Crest Forest, Cedar Pines Park, and throughout Crestline.
Response time: 95 min from Ramona, 80 min from Anza.
Pressure tank service in Crestline
Call (760) 440-8520 for tank sizing, replacement, or repair.