Great idea I'm electrician. N this is the best way to pull that pump up. It just cost me 4000.00 pump n tank..if I saw this sooner I would of saved 4000.00 dollars. Thank u. N now I'm selling my house
Wow very impressive, it's amazing what we could think of when your by yourselves in the woods, great job guy's, you worked together like a Well oiled machine. I just had my pump replaced, it to was over 400' long it cost me a little bit of cash. Wish I would of seen this earlier I definitely would and could of did it myself. With the help of my wife also. I should be good for a few years now, but in the future I will do this my self. Thanks great video
@@MrBriansAmazingWorld yep definitely, good stuff. Here in SA we use a 3 core submersible cable that runs all the way down the sleeve so we very seldom have the cable being damaged as it is well insulated. In addition we run a nylon ski type rope along with the pump so as not to put any stress on the cable when removing the pump.
Good job… Personally, I would’ve gone ahead and replaced the pump after all that work, and maybe kept the old pump for a last resort emergency backup…maybe remove the tree while it’s still small 😁
Well 2 months later I had to pull the pump and replace it. $800 later for the pump. All our pumps went this year. Septic, well and circulator pumps. Got 22 years out of them. Luckily I still had this setup made and it went pretty quick and smooth. And I thought about changing it the first time but....$800 and it still worked fine. Most of my stuff has a don't replace until it can't be cobbled together anymore policy.
@@MrBriansAmazingWorld - what brand pump did you use , and where did you purchase it ? I’m in northern IL and don’t want to wait 2 months for some specialized pump from overseas. Great video bro ❗️
I see this vid was from a couple years ago. Everything still good? I need to pull my pump and im looking for inspiration and tips. Previous owner bought this house in 1996 and there was no records of when the pump was installed even then and they never had to touch it. It still works but foot valve won't hold anymore and it hammers hard when it starts. But after 27+ years, I guess it doesn't owe anything! Gearing up to do this myself. Got a tractor some skills and the ambition!
Just take your time and plan to have a way to hold the weight so you don't have to. All is good since and hopefully for years to come. Saved a fortune! Just a tip if you want better water pressure use a stronger pump. Wish I went even bigger!
Good going ! That is a DEEP well ! I'll be doing the same here as soon as the temps warm up in the next 2-3 weeks. Same deal, just me and my wife. I have just about all the supplies. I've been watching H2O Mechanic and a few others. Good luck to me. Hey, what could go wrong eh ? Again, nice job. ^5
Looks like a great idea, I'm wondering if it would be a good idea when putting in a pump that it would be a good idea to attach stainless steel cable to the pump itself & run the cable to the top just for situations like this???
Nylon rope seams to hold up and work fine. There are plenty of people counting on the pipe and wire alone to hold their pump. Stainless steel would be expensive too. I'm sure it would work.
And it really was just a wire?.?. Hummm. I’m pulling my today. Hopefully I don’t need this new 1 horse pump but I’ll know when I pull it. Thanks for the video
I like to get any tree I can to grow. Especially these hardwood trees. These are ash trees and they are all dying from the emerald ash borer. The deer eat all the other baby hardwood trees too. Also the trees won't hurt the well it is 600 feet deep and has metal casing running to bedrock. Tree roots will affect septic fields, pipes, and foundations however.
I think you need more spacers. Those nylon well tubing wiring protectors are pretty cheap to have them every 10 feet. You can't have enough installed knowing what the pump starts can do to the tubing movement. @@MrBriansAmazingWorld
Big thumbs up to the lady with baby onboard for helping you out. 👍👍👍 Wow you guys did that job so well with available tools.
She's really something else. Lucky to have her help. Always make do with what you have.
Amazing tutorial!!! Thanks! We have a 60’ well but are having issues w it! Your video really helped us understand problems and troubleshooting!
I don’t easily impress, but you impressed the hell out of me. Can do attitude can get you far, brilliant idea btw. Great video, thanks for posting!
Great idea I'm electrician. N this is the best way to pull that pump up. It just cost me 4000.00 pump n tank..if I saw this sooner I would of saved 4000.00 dollars. Thank u. N now I'm selling my house
Phenomenal video ! Thanks for the tips and ideas ❗️
Happy to help!
Wow very impressive, it's amazing what we could think of when your by yourselves in the woods, great job guy's, you worked together like a Well oiled machine. I just had my pump replaced, it to was over 400' long it cost me a little bit of cash. Wish I would of seen this earlier I definitely would and could of did it myself. With the help of my wife also. I should be good for a few years now, but in the future I will do this my self. Thanks great video
Thanks! It was a trying day too. Everything was going wrong. Lucky to have her to help me out. Hopefully you never need to pull it!
wow, that contraption of yours worked very well, impressed. Can't imagine having to pull that out by hand
It is definitely not fun having to pull a well. So relieved that this worked as well as it did. It did all my hard lifting for me.
@@MrBriansAmazingWorld yep definitely, good stuff. Here in SA we use a 3 core submersible cable that runs all the way down the sleeve so we very seldom have the cable being damaged as it is well insulated. In addition we run a nylon ski type rope along with the pump so as not to put any stress on the cable when removing the pump.
@@geraldlopez6858 So with your installs you LEAVE the rope attached??
@@REVNUMANEWBERN yes, rope runs alongside cable, we usually just cable tie the rope (nylon rope) and the cable before dropping the pump
Had a friend pull my 440 footer out by HAND, ONE tuff lile guy! 5'5 145lbs n stout as a Rhino! :)
Hilarious and awesome. You rock!
Good job
Good job…
Personally, I would’ve gone ahead and replaced the pump after all that work, and maybe kept the old pump for a last resort emergency backup…maybe remove the tree while it’s still small 😁
Well 2 months later I had to pull the pump and replace it. $800 later for the pump. All our pumps went this year. Septic, well and circulator pumps. Got 22 years out of them. Luckily I still had this setup made and it went pretty quick and smooth. And I thought about changing it the first time but....$800 and it still worked fine. Most of my stuff has a don't replace until it can't be cobbled together anymore policy.
@@MrBriansAmazingWorld - what brand pump did you use , and where did you purchase it ?
I’m in northern IL and don’t want to wait 2 months for some specialized pump from overseas.
Great video bro ❗️
I see this vid was from a couple years ago. Everything still good?
I need to pull my pump and im looking for inspiration and tips. Previous owner bought this house in 1996 and there was no records of when the pump was installed even then and they never had to touch it. It still works but foot valve won't hold anymore and it hammers hard when it starts. But after 27+ years, I guess it doesn't owe anything!
Gearing up to do this myself. Got a tractor some skills and the ambition!
Just take your time and plan to have a way to hold the weight so you don't have to. All is good since and hopefully for years to come. Saved a fortune! Just a tip if you want better water pressure use a stronger pump. Wish I went even bigger!
Good going ! That is a DEEP well ! I'll be doing the same here as soon as the temps
warm up in the next 2-3 weeks. Same deal, just me and my wife. I have just about all
the supplies. I've been watching H2O Mechanic and a few others. Good luck to me.
Hey, what could go wrong eh ? Again, nice job. ^5
Beats paying someone else to do it. It's not the easiest job but getting creative really helped. Good luck!
wow what a great idea
Great job, idea for next time. Attach rope around well casing so it cant pull forward
They way I set it up the harder it pulled forward the more it dug the front angled 2x4s into the ground holding it in place.
you need 3 wire flat cable and a lot more taping like every 3 ft
Looks like a great idea, I'm wondering if it would be a good idea when putting in a pump that it would be a good idea to attach stainless steel cable to the pump itself & run the cable to the top just for situations like this???
Nylon rope seams to hold up and work fine. There are plenty of people counting on the pipe and wire alone to hold their pump. Stainless steel would be expensive too. I'm sure it would work.
And it really was just a wire?.?. Hummm. I’m pulling my today. Hopefully I don’t need this new 1 horse pump but I’ll know when I pull it. Thanks for the video
Yeah. Sometimes there are multiple spots on the wire that almost wear through so check it well.
I'm thinking the wiring got screwed as you pulled up ????
The wiring being screwed up was the reason we had to pull it in the first place. I only pull from the rope that is attached to the pump.
my problem is not covered do you have a way to remove stuck wireing above broken 1 1/4 pvc pipe
Fish it out
I'm new to this but why are you letting trees grow next to the well?
I like to get any tree I can to grow. Especially these hardwood trees. These are ash trees and they are all dying from the emerald ash borer. The deer eat all the other baby hardwood trees too. Also the trees won't hurt the well it is 600 feet deep and has metal casing running to bedrock. Tree roots will affect septic fields, pipes, and foundations however.
That was about 6 or 7 years ago we pulled and replaced the wires. Stopped with the bumper 2 ft from main road.
Yes. Really getting good at pulling these. It's a long pull.
Bet NOW you have a clear path cleaned out for next time
I pulled mine 2 years ago. It rubbed in about 10 spots.
Same issue here. Stinks knowing it will happen again. I wrapped a ton of electrical tape around to act as a wear bar.
I think you need more spacers. Those nylon well tubing wiring protectors are pretty cheap to have them every 10 feet. You can't have enough installed knowing what the pump starts can do to the tubing movement. @@MrBriansAmazingWorld
can you come to my house and do this pls? i'll pay
Haha possibly where about are you?
those trees growing around the well cant be doing it any good
I was wondering that but can't come up with anything that would hurt it. The steel casing is an 1/8 inch thick.
Just another incompetent well pull video. Cut that tree, wow