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System Was Poorly Designed or Undersized

Some water systems are installed quickly using generic equipment rather than being designed for the property’s real demand. These systems may technically work but perform poorly.

What you’ll usually notice

You may notice: – constant pump cycling – noisy operation – poor pressure when several outlets run – frequent equipment failures

What’s normally behind it

This usually happens when system components are selected without calculating the property’s flow demand. Typical causes include: – undersized pressure vessels – pumps selected for the wrong duty – incorrect system layout

Why quick fixes don’t stick

Replacing individual components with the same size equipment often repeats the original design mistake.

How this is normally handled

Water Usage Monitoring & Metering

This service diagnoses the real cause and fixes the system properly, not just the symptom.

What actually fixes it

This problem is normally handled by reviewing the system design and resizing the pump, storage, and control logic to match the actual demand of the property.

What you can check yourself

You can check a few things yourself:
– count how often the pump starts each hour
– more than 10–15 starts per hour usually indicates poor system design

When to call someone in

If the system constantly needs repairs or struggles to keep up with normal demand, a full system assessment is recommended.

Why does my borehole water look dirty or sandy?

Dirty or sandy borehole water usually indicates poor borehole development, pump placement issues, or the need for proper sediment and media filtration.

Why do filters block so quickly?

Filters blocking quickly is often due to incorrect filter selection, unexpected water quality issues, high sediment loads, or lack of staged pre-filtration.

Why is my water pressure low?

Low water pressure is usually caused by undersized pumps, incorrect pressure settings, pipe restrictions, or supply limitations from municipal, borehole, or tank-fed systems.

Why does my pump keep switching on and off?

Rapid pump cycling is typically caused by pressure tank issues, incorrect pressure switch settings, leaks, or pumps that are oversized for the system demand.

When should I call a water system professional?

You should call a professional when problems repeat, systems behave unpredictably, pumps fail regularly, or when you need clarity before making costly system changes.