FYI I work in a building where they used a lot of Pex piping and in about 5 years after install we had leaks everywhere. The pex will hairline crack. Trust me it’s a huge problem. We have at least one leak a week in a building of about 270 rooms all due to that pex pipe.
@@antoniehm87 that’s what happens when someone cheaps out and buys the lowest grade Pex. Pex had a few issues when it first came out, but those issues have been solved and today it’s the standard. Fantastic stuff
A few notes from a well industry professional: If you live somewhere that has winter that buried line should be at least 4ft deep to avoid freezing. There's special adapters (called a pitless) you can buy so that the junction with the well casing can be buried as well. Also, if this DIY well is to be used for drinking water you need to check with your town hall. You may need to file for a permit and prove that the well is a safe distance from any septic systems.
Thanks for raining on the parade! :-p Seriously, yes, everything needs to be taken into account, especially permits. I had already run that through my mind before I ever saw this comment. Actually, from his first video. Really, though, since forever ago.
If you're anywhere that HAS a town hall, they're likely to just tell you to GFY if you apply for a well permit instead of just getting a municipal water hookup lol.
@@philgar7786I put one in for irrigation and I didn’t even think about talking to the city about it. I know they don’t care but they could involve the department of environmental quality and then beings I don’t have actual water rights I would need to prove that it doesn’t yield 35gpm or more and it just turns into a royal pain. Some states are a lot nicer when it comes to water rules
I can’t speak for other regions but in South Florida when pvc pipe is exposed to the sun it will eventually turn brittle and easily crack. If it is exposed then it needs to be painted or covered to protect it from uv rays.
Just an idea for when running your hose through the studs. Put a metal plate on the front side of the stud to protect the hose from future projects. You don't want to drill into a stud later and screw into your hose creating a leak.
@@johnn3542 Interesting. I always wondered where these numbers come from. Why inch and a quarter? What's the significance of that distance? Idle curiosity.
@@GeddyRC standard drywall screws are about 1.25 inches long, and 1/2" drywall is standard thickness, might go thicker, would rarely go thinner, so you have some built-in wiggle room but should always be safe (from pro drywallers' screws, though we DIYers are less predictable and might use longer screws, if that's what we have on hand).
Pro plumber here, you did a phenomenal job! I was in shock at all the small, but pro stuff you did. Like that drip pan, I was like, Woah!!! Then you added the drain, and I was like WOAAAHH!!! If you would have ran that tilube out to the side of the cabin as an indicator that it's leaking, I would have just about lost my Sh***t!!! :DDDD. One small criticism I'd have is more of an experience thing, but the stronger material is always your female. The connection you had on your pump, you used a 1" brass nipple and connected it with a pvc female. The plastic is molded in two halves and can split, resulting in a leak down the line. Next time, plastic MIP into the pump, or brass coupling and plastic mip. Tl:Dr plastic mip > plastic fip
Plumber here too, had the same reaction. He even did a quarter turn when he glued the pvc. Pass on the sharkbite because it's not covered by drywall and in a shed. Great work.
I have been using the similar/possibly the same Harbor Freight pump without the pressure tank fed from a water source and have been very impressed. It easily supplies 4 impact sprinklers. Those pumps are definitely on of HF's hidden gems.
I did something similar at our lake this summer. If you end up hooking this to a sprinkler system, go full 1" supply lines and then half inch to each sprinkler. Rigiht now your pex will be a bottleneck and restrict the GPM. Likely not an issue with one sprinkler, but will be with more heads
That particular Aquor attachment, that angle valve, has a very fine strainer in it. That's likely why your pressure was so low. You can use some needlenose pliers to unscrew it and remove the screen.
Using this since 2005. Got submersible pump connected to water tanks. If water not drinkable install purifier it's pretty cheap. Plus you get a lot of drinkable water. PS. Water harvesting is also important to maintain the ground water level. Rain water harvesting would be very good way to maintain the level.
Amazing how you are able to do this where I live in California and have a better chance at finding gold than water underground. You are lucky to have all that water available on tap....literally
I love this video. A couple of thoughts. 1. If you live in an area with incredibly rocky soil like I do, you won't be able to drill your well so easily and will need expensive equipment. 2. 6:38 - I would have added pipe dope to that connection. You wouldn't have gotten any leaks that way 3. How much water can you draw before the well runs dry? I have a shallow well that often ran dry if multiple people took showers, then someone did the laundry, so I added a 200 gallon tank, along with float switches to constantly try to pump water until either the well ran dry or the float switch finally indicated the tank was full. I then added a device that auto shuts off the pump when the well runs dry, waits 2 hours (you can adjust the time), then tries again. Since this is just an outside pump (and not your house water), this is probably overkill. But if you're looking for another project, this is something cool you could do. You could get, for example, 2 55 gallon food grade drums. I did this very thing to catch rain water off of my shed. Speaking of which... 4. You could supplement the water coming from the well (in case it doesn't produce enough water) with rain water from your shed. 5. I'm not sure how durable that pump is, but I'd put a sediment filter in between the pump and the well. Again, another fun video you could make Once again, great video.
A tip on "proper" wateproofing of screws, seal both under the object and around the head. In this case between the pan and leg of the pump, and under the head.
There’s a few mods you might want to make, as I’m in MA as well. Did you forget about winter? Might want to add some way to blow out the water out of the lines, to winterize the system, or bring that HF pump and portable battery indoors during the frozen tundra time coming up. Good job, very creative.
Heh, this isn't a serious video - it's an add for stupid faucets that need proprietary connectors, and battery packs. Learn to know when you're watching an ad vs a serious how to video. Oh, and hose reels too... and solar panels - the longer you watch, the more products are "placed" into it. Haha, what a joke.
@@gorak9000 Harbor Freight probably underwrites most of these. 😜 Off top of head, other problems besides freezing in the winter: 1) having drilling rights to your property 2) knowing if that well water is safe to use untreated
If he lives in an area that gets cold during the winter.. It's going to be a nightmare to keep that from freezing up.. He'll have to build a well house over the pipe and heat it..
@@CainnechK any water still in the pump or lines will break them when the water freezes. Compressed air is often used to blow out pipes, but he didn't include a way for the air to get out at the hand pump. I guess his pump has a way to be drained of water? He didn't say.
Thorough except for freezing. As a teen Granpa and I did this in 1974. It is great to have your own water supply. I suggest drain it fully so as to avoid cracking your iron and plastic pipes. 'How to' would be a great video extension from this install. Then your plastic housing for the hose, its hanger, and the PVC needs paint as it will react and become brittle over time. I'm in the city in the US with the most clear days, with 100+ degrees at over 100 days this year, as usual. When I buy PVC I paint it straight from the store, I don't even bother waiting to pull it out for a project.
Brilliant. Information like this is something that should be taught in like high schools. We can’t teach American history anymore without someone losing their mind. So just replace it with info like this. So helpful.
as a person that works on systems similar to this I just want to thank you for thinking ahead and planning to fix things in the future should they break there are so many jobs I go on and its obvious the person who built it never planned on anything needing fixing in the future
If in the northern hemisphere where you have very cold winters, I would recommend using ALL cast pipe because when the ground freezes the water in the line will also freeze and split the PVC.
Not to mention that a back up battery will be a gonner after a couple of hard freezes. Lithium batteries aren't designed to be in freezing weather. Also, this project must have cost $2k-$3k to save a few bucks a month which makes no sense to me but whatever. Interesting project but not for all climates.
NO! You do not use metal pipes in areas that have freezing temp. You use poly-based pipes and fitting because they can handle being frozen due to that type of plastics' ability to stretch a little.
@@MrSupernova111 LOL! I was doing the math too. Rich yuppie DIY has zero honest thought or financial rationale behind it ever. Spend thousands to feel good about saving maybe a few 10's of dollars a year for a few years until the systems all start to age out and fail. Then start over!
I have an electric pump at my house bc we’re not in the city so we don’t have city water. It brings up the electric bill but with the right filter and softener the flavor is so much better, along with the quality.
This is a great video and idea for people that live in areas with sand and gravel formation and high surface water. Before spending money on this type of effort for a well consider researching your local water formations and well logs. We drill water wells and if you tried to do this most places around us you would hit solid bedrock after 10-20 feet or dense clays. Certainly lots of places where is is a viable option though!
What an interesting and well made video. Watched start to finish, I love this kind of stuff anyway but the fact that you've got an electrical water pump powered by solar, and are essentially paying for nothing to water your lawn and provide water inside the shed, is just so cool to me. Nice work!
excellent video, this is something I really have to try. Sometimes when it hasn't rained for some time we have to go on water rationing and can't water the yard. this would really help in keeping the yard from drying out and turning brown.
Good idea on the union outside. I recommend to have one at the pump that will help with maintenance and tightening the fittings at the pump when they leak like in the video. Also did you bother closing the gap around the inlet pipe into the shed and if so what was your solution?
Just bought a new property and want to do something like this, but winters would destroy that setup here...need to modify it for cold temps and it looks genius! Thanks!
You could run a 10AWG cord (for good measure) from your breaker box to a shed and pump with grid electricity instead of LiFePO4 that won't stand so well in freezing temps
Connect a water hose at full pressure to the top of your pipe with a fitting that accepts water hose fittings. Then turn on the water pressure that will run inside and down the pipe and eventually out of the screen at the bottom of the pipe, while you hammer the pipe in the ground to improving drilling your pipe into the ground. The hydraulic water pressure will help move the sand away from the pipe while you drill it down. Once you reach the point where you can't go any further or feel it's enough, then the water will allow the sand to pack around the pipe for more stability. The next recommendation is to put a sentiment filter before your electric pump, to keep sand out of the pump, when can wear out seals and pump parts from fitting tightly, and also improve your water quality. Another pro tip is install the pump and water lines outside the shed. Place the pump next to the shed and build a cover for the pump to protect it from the elements. This will reduce noise inside the shed when you use it as a workshop and also avoid problems if something leaks.
I'm loving the evolution of your shed from delivery to full off grid test setup :D Can't wait to see it fully stocked when you do the organization video later!
Another excellent video! Get yourself a Berkey water filter, and you can have off-grid clean drinking water any time, as well. “As well” - see what I did there? I’ll show myself to the door…
Thank you, I have seen those, they seem really great! You can also run reverse osmosis systems for total pure water with no electricity too. I will have another video on water testing soon too.
Awesome video! So many ideas love it! Don't forget to add a small piece of metal window screen to the drain hole in the shed floor to keep out any mice/rodents. Keep creating!
Late to the video, you should install a booster tank, it will help keep the pressure steady and prevent your pump from always running especially while sprinkling
@@SilverCymbal what would you do differently if you had to do this project over again? A video showing how you winterize this setup would be very interesting.
@@blsnash99 One mistake I made was not using teflon tape specifically for stainless fittings, thats the shot where you see it dripping, once I swapped out the tape it fixed it. Other than that its really working but as I use it more I will likely find things to imrpove, others will likely chime in too with some ideas
Bring in a water tank and pump and bore your hole with a water jet. Worked really well (pardon the pun) for me. Alot less stress and energy expenditure.
If you are in a location that freezes, how do you winterize this setup? Would love to see a video on that! Great job on the whole project. I am thinking about doing a well for my multizone irrigation but I'm worried about the freezing and what happens to the well in winter.
I second this suggestion. If I were to set this up in Fairbanks, for instance, I imagine there could be some problems. Maybe build some sort of well house over the top, and bury the plumbing below the frost layer.
@@tenter8457 In Alaska I absolutely would house it. With your freeze depth and time I would just drain the thing and have another spring project to restart it. Not much need for outside water in winter/Alaska I can think of.
Awesome. 2 questions. How do you bang a 20 foot pipe into the ground? Do you start banging it in at an angle? 2nd question. Did you run into any hard rocks/boulders when banging it into the ground? I would love to do this in my yard. I know I have water running through my yard.
Thank you so much for that video im building a off grid cabing i have surface water at 16-20 feet but wanted a jet pump and solar pannels. 🎉🎉 thank u for the ideas
That was very cool .... Good job and a great video. I have a beautiful shed and I always wanted to add solar panels to it to run the garden lights and pond pump. You inspired me to research this more.
I like the demonstration of setting everything up, it was very easy to follow. But is this possible with a solar generator that doesn't cost 2k or are the other ones not strong enough? That's definitely out of my price range.
You can diy a battery storage system for much cheaper. Lot of work though. If you don't have an all in one unit, you will need at least 1 kWh of batteries (2 or more is better), a solar charge controller at the voltage of the batteries, and a pure sine wave inverter that can handle 1.5 kw continuous power output. You can probably diy it for around $600-1000.
We had one in the other house. Yes water free but state dictated restrictions as to when could use.. reason it lowers water available to them to sell. We had a 3 phase pump about 4 feet below ground level. I'm in Western Australia.
Minutes ago, I received a quote to install a new water well at my house in the Hiroshima countryside (via Edion's referral to a "pump master"). They said that my old well -- a traditional one with a concrete cap and old pump sitting on top -- was dry, though they never actually took the lid off. Instead, they only peered through the small hole where the PVC pipe enters, using a small flashlight to look inside. I can't see anything when I do that, so I wonder how they can! Anyway, they said "Your well is dry, we recommend digging a new one and installing new pipes, pumps, and water heater. The cost would be 2,000,000 yen." That is over $16,000 USD, by the way. After I woke up from having passed out, I remembered your video and some others I've watched about digging my own well. Since this land is in the countryside and I own the land, I have no fear of striking any underground cables. There are no sewage lines there and the only power line feed comes in through the top of the house, as all electricity is up on poles. Now I'm wondering if I can get enough water from a setup like yours to provide water to my house (one kitchen, one bathroom, and a couple of outdoor spigots). Or, how many of these would I need to connect in tandem to have what I need? I'm definitely NOT going to be shelling out $16K for such an overpriced setup.
Thanks for watching please LIKE & SUBSCRIBE - *Sledgehammer DIY Well install* ruclips.net/video/E-pn41fqYXs/видео.html - Tools & Parts: www.amazon.com/shop/silvercymbal
Dude great video excellent work and wow you have a good little set up.
This is very good!! Thank you for posting!! Do you live in a climate that stays above freezing throughout the year?
Thanks. Great for villages in Africa.
Free after you dig a 10k well
Please fix all the leaking pluming at the pump, it will cause problems if not fixed soon.
Pro tip: pound the tubing in above the city water line.
Hilarious!!🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣
@@reidgleason7862 he should most definitely stick to lawn mowing tips
FYI I work in a building where they used a lot of Pex piping and in about 5 years after install we had leaks everywhere. The pex will hairline crack. Trust me it’s a huge problem. We have at least one leak a week in a building of about 270 rooms all due to that pex pipe.
@@antoniehm87 that’s what happens when someone cheaps out and buys the lowest grade Pex. Pex had a few issues when it first came out, but those issues have been solved and today it’s the standard. Fantastic stuff
A few notes from a well industry professional: If you live somewhere that has winter that buried line should be at least 4ft deep to avoid freezing. There's special adapters (called a pitless) you can buy so that the junction with the well casing can be buried as well. Also, if this DIY well is to be used for drinking water you need to check with your town hall. You may need to file for a permit and prove that the well is a safe distance from any septic systems.
Thanks for the sound advice
Thanks for raining on the parade! :-p Seriously, yes, everything needs to be taken into account, especially permits. I had already run that through my mind before I ever saw this comment. Actually, from his first video. Really, though, since forever ago.
If you're anywhere that HAS a town hall, they're likely to just tell you to GFY if you apply for a well permit instead of just getting a municipal water hookup lol.
@@Nevir202every county is gonna have a town hall/ governing authority of some sort
@@philgar7786I put one in for irrigation and I didn’t even think about talking to the city about it. I know they don’t care but they could involve the department of environmental quality and then beings I don’t have actual water rights I would need to prove that it doesn’t yield 35gpm or more and it just turns into a royal pain. Some states are a lot nicer when it comes to water rules
I can’t speak for other regions but in South Florida when pvc pipe is exposed to the sun it will eventually turn brittle and easily crack. If it is exposed then it needs to be painted or covered to protect it from uv rays.
In Minnesota the cold cracks our pvc pipes lol
I does in the midwest to it just takes longer
Florida sucks hahaha
Use a latex based paint
@@nonyobussiness3440 Yeah please stay out of Florida! ;)
Just an idea for when running your hose through the studs. Put a metal plate on the front side of the stud to protect the hose from future projects. You don't want to drill into a stud later and screw into your hose creating a leak.
Not needed, hose is far enough from edges of stud. If it's closer than 1.25 inches you need a plate.
@@johnn3542 Interesting. I always wondered where these numbers come from. Why inch and a quarter? What's the significance of that distance? Idle curiosity.
@@GeddyRC standard drywall screws are about 1.25 inches long, and 1/2" drywall is standard thickness, might go thicker, would rarely go thinner, so you have some built-in wiggle room but should always be safe (from pro drywallers' screws, though we DIYers are less predictable and might use longer screws, if that's what we have on hand).
Man this guy makes everything look super easy
For real I would hire him I know nothing would go wrong lol
Pro plumber here, you did a phenomenal job! I was in shock at all the small, but pro stuff you did. Like that drip pan, I was like, Woah!!! Then you added the drain, and I was like WOAAAHH!!! If you would have ran that tilube out to the side of the cabin as an indicator that it's leaking, I would have just about lost my Sh***t!!! :DDDD.
One small criticism I'd have is more of an experience thing, but the stronger material is always your female. The connection you had on your pump, you used a 1" brass nipple and connected it with a pvc female. The plastic is molded in two halves and can split, resulting in a leak down the line. Next time, plastic MIP into the pump, or brass coupling and plastic mip.
Tl:Dr plastic mip > plastic fip
Plumber here too, had the same reaction. He even did a quarter turn when he glued the pvc. Pass on the sharkbite because it's not covered by drywall and in a shed. Great work.
I have been using the similar/possibly the same Harbor Freight pump without the pressure tank fed from a water source and have been very impressed. It easily supplies 4 impact sprinklers. Those pumps are definitely on of HF's hidden gems.
Thanks for keeping the content as short as possible without any extra long and unneeded footage!
I did something similar at our lake this summer. If you end up hooking this to a sprinkler system, go full 1" supply lines and then half inch to each sprinkler. Rigiht now your pex will be a bottleneck and restrict the GPM. Likely not an issue with one sprinkler, but will be with more heads
Absolutely agree. Minimum 1” inner diameter on the suckomg side and the output main line as well.
Thank you for that info!
That particular Aquor attachment, that angle valve, has a very fine strainer in it. That's likely why your pressure was so low. You can use some needlenose pliers to unscrew it and remove the screen.
Great video. Pro Tip: Paint or tape your outdoor PVC that is exposed to UV or it will become brittle
agreed
they make UV resistant paint.
Using this since 2005. Got submersible pump connected to water tanks. If water not drinkable install purifier it's pretty cheap. Plus you get a lot of drinkable water. PS. Water harvesting is also important to maintain the ground water level. Rain water harvesting would be very good way to maintain the level.
Amazing how you are able to do this where I live in California and have a better chance at finding gold than water underground. You are lucky to have all that water available on tap....literally
Not true. Look up Primary Water. Deborah Tavarez has a very informative video on this.
It is California. It is probably illegal anyway. "Free water! How dare you not pay the government for your water" 😁
@@carlosd5103 Yes, CA where people were getting in trouble capturing rainfall in barrels.
Grew up in an area of California with lots of old gold mines. Wasn't that uncommon for people to drill into old mine shafts when drilling for wells
California has tons of water underground.
I love this video. A couple of thoughts.
1. If you live in an area with incredibly rocky soil like I do, you won't be able to drill your well so easily and will need expensive equipment.
2. 6:38 - I would have added pipe dope to that connection. You wouldn't have gotten any leaks that way
3. How much water can you draw before the well runs dry? I have a shallow well that often ran dry if multiple people took showers, then someone did the laundry, so I added a 200 gallon tank, along with float switches to constantly try to pump water until either the well ran dry or the float switch finally indicated the tank was full. I then added a device that auto shuts off the pump when the well runs dry, waits 2 hours (you can adjust the time), then tries again. Since this is just an outside pump (and not your house water), this is probably overkill. But if you're looking for another project, this is something cool you could do. You could get, for example, 2 55 gallon food grade drums. I did this very thing to catch rain water off of my shed. Speaking of which...
4. You could supplement the water coming from the well (in case it doesn't produce enough water) with rain water from your shed.
5. I'm not sure how durable that pump is, but I'd put a sediment filter in between the pump and the well. Again, another fun video you could make
Once again, great video.
A tip on "proper" wateproofing of screws, seal both under the object and around the head. In this case between the pan and leg of the pump, and under the head.
This guys is amazing and blessed with the perfect tutorial voice.
I love how you narrate your videos. You make it very easy to understand. One of my favorite channels!
The amount of times i rewatched this when I was younger is crazy💀🙏🏻
There’s a few mods you might want to make, as I’m in MA as well. Did you forget about winter? Might want to add some way to blow out the water out of the lines, to winterize the system, or bring that HF pump and portable battery indoors during the frozen tundra time coming up. Good job, very creative.
His battery is going to freeze too but whatever.
Heh, this isn't a serious video - it's an add for stupid faucets that need proprietary connectors, and battery packs. Learn to know when you're watching an ad vs a serious how to video. Oh, and hose reels too... and solar panels - the longer you watch, the more products are "placed" into it. Haha, what a joke.
@@gorak9000 Harbor Freight probably underwrites most of these. 😜
Off top of head, other problems besides freezing in the winter: 1) having drilling rights to your property 2) knowing if that well water is safe to use untreated
A poor substitute for getting a real well drilled
@@keyworksales6241 Why pay the ridiculous cost of a well when you can do it yourself? Independence, give it a try.
Well done. Been doing irrigation and plumbing for over 30 yrs. U set that up like a pro. Great video.
How much to install this it's wonderful
This along with the original well installation video is nothing short of excellent. Thank you very much for your service.
Can’t wait to see this get winterized
If he lives in an area that gets cold during the winter.. It's going to be a nightmare to keep that from freezing up.. He'll have to build a well house over the pipe and heat it..
Drain it. Simple
Disconnect the electric pump and cap it as shown, should be fine.
@@CainnechK any water still in the pump or lines will break them when the water freezes. Compressed air is often used to blow out pipes, but he didn't include a way for the air to get out at the hand pump. I guess his pump has a way to be drained of water? He didn't say.
@@chrisfuller1268 only the water near the very top would freeze, no?
Excellent video! Very instructive and the flow of the video was perfect! Well done, sir!
Thank you kindly!
Thorough except for freezing. As a teen Granpa and I did this in 1974. It is great to have your own water supply. I suggest drain it fully so as to avoid cracking your iron and plastic pipes. 'How to' would be a great video extension from this install.
Then your plastic housing for the hose, its hanger, and the PVC needs paint as it will react and become brittle over time. I'm in the city in the US with the most clear days, with 100+ degrees at over 100 days this year, as usual. When I buy PVC I paint it straight from the store, I don't even bother waiting to pull it out for a project.
Brilliant. Information like this is something that should be taught in like high schools. We can’t teach American history anymore without someone losing their mind. So just replace it with info like this. So helpful.
Wow I really appreciate that, thank you
as a person that works on systems similar to this I just want to thank you for thinking ahead and planning to fix things in the future should they break there are so many jobs I go on and its obvious the person who built it never planned on anything needing fixing in the future
If in the northern hemisphere where you have very cold winters, I would recommend using ALL cast pipe because when the ground freezes the water in the line will also freeze and split the PVC.
Not to mention that a back up battery will be a gonner after a couple of hard freezes. Lithium batteries aren't designed to be in freezing weather. Also, this project must have cost $2k-$3k to save a few bucks a month which makes no sense to me but whatever. Interesting project but not for all climates.
Ice will break cast also.
NO! You do not use metal pipes in areas that have freezing temp. You use poly-based pipes and fitting because they can handle being frozen due to that type of plastics' ability to stretch a little.
@@MrSupernova111 LOL! I was doing the math too. Rich yuppie DIY has zero honest thought or financial rationale behind it ever. Spend thousands to feel good about saving maybe a few 10's of dollars a year for a few years until the systems all start to age out and fail. Then start over!
@@illbeyourmonster3591 Agree 100%
My fiancee and i are grateful for this. You have a great voice, and energy for delivery. I will be following from now on :)
Loved every minute of this video. Such a resourceful system. Awesome.
Glad you liked it!
I have an electric pump at my house bc we’re not in the city so we don’t have city water. It brings up the electric bill but with the right filter and softener the flavor is so much better, along with the quality.
Never thought DIY can go this far 👍
Very well done. Clear explanations without injecting extraneous comments on the state of the world.
Great setup! Only thing I would’ve done differently is to use a larger diameter pipe than the pex to get possibly higher flow rate.
but then pressure falls off, unless you need flow rate at the sacrifice of pressure
@@therealjpow higher pressure can mean higher flow rate if done properly that is
@@TheTallOne890 very true! then we get in the complicated math of pipe diameter and length of product travel but that’s a whole lot of work
@@therealjpow no thank you friendo not in the mood to do math lol
This is a great video and idea for people that live in areas with sand and gravel formation and high surface water. Before spending money on this type of effort for a well consider researching your local water formations and well logs. We drill water wells and if you tried to do this most places around us you would hit solid bedrock after 10-20 feet or dense clays. Certainly lots of places where is is a viable option though!
Idk why I watch your videos and I don’t even own a house yet 😂 I’m storing the information for later! Good work
What a great idea… you make everything look so easy and your narration is great also, your explanations are clear and and easy to understand!
And ignore rules and regulations.
Love this. Makes me wonder how this would work with an in-line water heater and used as a shower.
For hot water setup its own solar heater is what I would do.
What an interesting and well made video. Watched start to finish, I love this kind of stuff anyway but the fact that you've got an electrical water pump powered by solar, and are essentially paying for nothing to water your lawn and provide water inside the shed, is just so cool to me. Nice work!
Yes I was asking for this. THANK YOU 🙏
This video inspired me to have the money necessary to do projects like this when i move out. I love this stuff.
What about winterizing to prevent freezing up and busted pipes.
excellent video, this is something I really have to try. Sometimes when it hasn't rained for some time we have to go on water rationing and can't water the yard. this would really help in keeping the yard from drying out and turning brown.
Good idea on the union outside. I recommend to have one at the pump that will help with maintenance and tightening the fittings at the pump when they leak like in the video. Also did you bother closing the gap around the inlet pipe into the shed and if so what was your solution?
facts, the leaky pipes at the pump will cause issues.
The cleanest pump install I’ve ever seen
This is pure genius! Thank you for posting!
I really appreciate that, thank you
The place you live is absolutely beautiful 😳
So inspired!!!!! Thank you for showing me how far DIY can go :)
Just bought a new property and want to do something like this, but winters would destroy that setup here...need to modify it for cold temps and it looks genius! Thanks!
You could run a 10AWG cord (for good measure) from your breaker box to a shed and pump with grid electricity instead of LiFePO4 that won't stand so well in freezing temps
youre the dream handyman!
Connect a water hose at full pressure to the top of your pipe with a fitting that accepts water hose fittings. Then turn on the water pressure that will run inside and down the pipe and eventually out of the screen at the bottom of the pipe, while you hammer the pipe in the ground to improving drilling your pipe into the ground. The hydraulic water pressure will help move the sand away from the pipe while you drill it down. Once you reach the point where you can't go any further or feel it's enough, then the water will allow the sand to pack around the pipe for more stability. The next recommendation is to put a sentiment filter before your electric pump, to keep sand out of the pump, when can wear out seals and pump parts from fitting tightly, and also improve your water quality. Another pro tip is install the pump and water lines outside the shed. Place the pump next to the shed and build a cover for the pump to protect it from the elements. This will reduce noise inside the shed when you use it as a workshop and also avoid problems if something leaks.
Man that was so cool. Love it. Can’t wait to have my own land and do this one day
Dude I've been watching you for years now. You are super talented. I've never even thought about this one.
Nothing is free and it’s definitely not endless
Your definition of free is interesting.
I'm loving the evolution of your shed from delivery to full off grid test setup :D Can't wait to see it fully stocked when you do the organization video later!
I’m going to try this in my apartment thanks for this hack
Another excellent video! Get yourself a Berkey water filter, and you can have off-grid clean drinking water any time, as well.
“As well” - see what I did there? I’ll show myself to the door…
Thank you, I have seen those, they seem really great! You can also run reverse osmosis systems for total pure water with no electricity too. I will have another video on water testing soon too.
@@SilverCymbal are you doing one on reverse osmosis?
@@geod3589 I have used one in my house for ages, I really like them.
Great follow-up video to the manual hand pump
Awesome video! So many ideas love it! Don't forget to add a small piece of metal window screen to the drain hole in the shed floor to keep out any mice/rodents. Keep creating!
I was thinking the same thing.
Should have stuffed it in the before he shoved it down,, now he's GOTTA go underneath &do all that way more ARDUOUS. .
✔️
He did do that. But with a nice cover.
Thanks. I"ll be driving my own well soon and your vid gave me some great ideas.
Very impressed, Great job loved the way you presented it.
Rule of correction: Nothing endless is free and nothing free is endless. 👍👍👍
You are a channel of many talents. Those well systems are fascinating. Wish we could do that in CA.
Is it possible in the suburbs?
Late to the video, you should install a booster tank, it will help keep the pressure steady and prevent your pump from always running especially while sprinkling
Your videos are great… so many awesome ideas for my homestead! Thank you so much! Keep it up
You are so welcome!
@@SilverCymbal what would you do differently if you had to do this project over again? A video showing how you winterize this setup would be very interesting.
@@blsnash99 One mistake I made was not using teflon tape specifically for stainless fittings, thats the shot where you see it dripping, once I swapped out the tape it fixed it. Other than that its really working but as I use it more I will likely find things to imrpove, others will likely chime in too with some ideas
@@SilverCymbal Can’t wait for your video on the lights install on your shed
Bring in a water tank and pump and bore your hole with a water jet. Worked really well (pardon the pun) for me. Alot less stress and energy expenditure.
You meant Teflon tape “for drinkable water”, a lot of people do not know there are “multiple” different types of Teflon tape
I admire people like you!!
If you are in a location that freezes, how do you winterize this setup? Would love to see a video on that! Great job on the whole project. I am thinking about doing a well for my multizone irrigation but I'm worried about the freezing and what happens to the well in winter.
I second this suggestion. If I were to set this up in Fairbanks, for instance, I imagine there could be some problems. Maybe build some sort of well house over the top, and bury the plumbing below the frost layer.
@@tenter8457 In Alaska I absolutely would house it. With your freeze depth and time I would just drain the thing and have another spring project to restart it. Not much need for outside water in winter/Alaska I can think of.
Love this video this will make life more easy to run off the grid money saver ideas for your home 💰
Awesome. 2 questions. How do you bang a 20 foot pipe into the ground? Do you start banging it in at an angle? 2nd question. Did you run into any hard rocks/boulders when banging it into the ground? I would love to do this in my yard. I know I have water running through my yard.
This shows how I did it, ruclips.net/video/E-pn41fqYXs/видео.html
Get a hoe for all your banging, just make sure your neighbours ain't around. Btw, hoes are also good for trench diggin and whatnot.
Thank you so much for that video im building a off grid cabing i have surface water at 16-20 feet but wanted a jet pump and solar pannels. 🎉🎉 thank u for the ideas
That was very cool .... Good job and a great video. I have a beautiful shed and I always wanted to add solar panels to it to run the garden lights and pond pump. You inspired me to research this more.
This is what I call surviving and being smart.
Comment added. Plus I watched both ads without skipping.
Everyone should be doing this to become more independent. Great vid!
Great info, thanks! 👍 Would you have to cover or somehow protect the exposed pipe and PVC during the winter or would it be fine by itself?
The way this one is setip it wouldn't be able to handle freezing, you would either have to use heat tape or insulate the pipes very heavily.
@@corsontucker I would just drain the pipe at the start of winter
Brilliant Li'l shed Project!
Loved it.
Cheers,
Eric
"I wanted a bit of an upgrade, so I install the nuclear power plant I showed you how to build in a pervious video."
Some people want to be sports or music stars, I want to be like you.
I like the demonstration of setting everything up, it was very easy to follow. But is this possible with a solar generator that doesn't cost 2k or are the other ones not strong enough? That's definitely out of my price range.
You can diy a battery storage system for much cheaper. Lot of work though. If you don't have an all in one unit, you will need at least 1 kWh of batteries (2 or more is better), a solar charge controller at the voltage of the batteries, and a pure sine wave inverter that can handle 1.5 kw continuous power output. You can probably diy it for around $600-1000.
A few minutes ago i was watching how to cook karaage and authnetic wasabi now im here
No way in hell does pipe just pound in the ground that easy.
I'm not superman, and it's some effort but if you can swing a hammer you can do it.
Cape cod has a lot of sandy soil, so that may have helped.
It's not easy but it takes a lot less time than you might think. You will have blisters.
Just went down 20 feet the exact same way! Probably about a quarter inch per hit with the sledge hammer. Wear gloves and take lots of breaks!
Recommendation putting the tee 3 feet down below the ground. So its below the frost line .
The DEMOCRATS would pass a law AGAINST this smart man and his freedoms
We had one in the other house. Yes water free but state dictated restrictions as to when could use.. reason it lowers water available to them to sell.
We had a 3 phase pump about 4 feet below ground level.
I'm in Western Australia.
So epic. Free and shtf water.
Thank you very true, we have lost our main water supply before. This sure would have beat drinking from the toilets!
Wow.. you're quite knowledgeable in this area.. I wish there was a guy like you in my area, I'd like to hire to do something like this for me.
I think I would have put a Union on the inlet side of your electric pump, just in case! Very clean installation.👍👍
Heck-of-a-job.!
this is the high end version of the Indian videos that make limitless energy with a paper clip and penny
This RUclips site is so satisfying!
Excellent video! Glad to see the shed electrified!
Good build. FYI: galvanized piping collects lead deposits that form and build within the pipe.
Minutes ago, I received a quote to install a new water well at my house in the Hiroshima countryside (via Edion's referral to a "pump master"). They said that my old well -- a traditional one with a concrete cap and old pump sitting on top -- was dry, though they never actually took the lid off. Instead, they only peered through the small hole where the PVC pipe enters, using a small flashlight to look inside. I can't see anything when I do that, so I wonder how they can! Anyway, they said "Your well is dry, we recommend digging a new one and installing new pipes, pumps, and water heater. The cost would be 2,000,000 yen." That is over $16,000 USD, by the way. After I woke up from having passed out, I remembered your video and some others I've watched about digging my own well. Since this land is in the countryside and I own the land, I have no fear of striking any underground cables. There are no sewage lines there and the only power line feed comes in through the top of the house, as all electricity is up on poles. Now I'm wondering if I can get enough water from a setup like yours to provide water to my house (one kitchen, one bathroom, and a couple of outdoor spigots). Or, how many of these would I need to connect in tandem to have what I need? I'm definitely NOT going to be shelling out $16K for such an overpriced setup.
Yummm contaminated ground water, my favorite
I really like this idea but what happen in the winter seasons, won’t the PVC or the pex tubing burst?
I gotta say this is really cool and that's a beautiful yard.
This is awesome. I’m on a well but they drilled like 500ft. This would be awesome !