Water Pumping Windmills
Water Pumping Windmills
Water Pumping Windmills
http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/ainsworth90.html Standing tall like a giant sunflower in a sea of undulating prairie grasses, or in any rural setting, a
windmill is a thing of beauty. Not only are water pumping windmills a joy to watch, but they are incredibly useful. Powered only by wind, they work like quietly-purring nonpolluting creatures, to keep our storage tanks overflowing with fresh water. They operate effortlessly, efficiently, reliably.
western Europe. By the late 19th century, the count was 30,000and, miraculously, there was still enough wind to go around.
The windmill pump cylinder. Each upstroke (figure on right) pulls a certain amount of water into the cylinder, but on the down-stroke (left) a check valve in the bottom wont let it be pushed out, so the water has nowhere to go but up with the next upstroke.
The most common practical uses for a windmill are to irrigate pastures and gardens, water livestock, and supply and aerate ponds. Anything more than that requires a holding tank on stilts, or a water tower, to provide enough pressure to be on tap for household use.
delivering 20 to 30 gallons of water a minute, and that drowned out the windmill era. By 1970, only three companies in the U.S. produced water pumping windmills: Aermotor, Dempster, and Baker Monitor, and they are still around today.
From top to bottom: Pump-rod assembly, cylinder, and plunger with leathers
of a hill so the water is gravity-fed for all my needs on the property. (More about my system later). I love the idea that if the power fails, Ill still have fresh waterlots of fresh water. To me, thats selfsufficiency and a nice sense of security. Evidently a lot of backwoods people feel that way because windmills are making a comeback. Aermotor claims that sales of windmills, both for generating electricity and for pumping water, are increasing worldwide, and more windmills are pumping water today than at the turn of the century.
Chances are youll hit a good water table between 100 and 400 feet, the average depth being 250 feet. Figure a well will cost you somewhere between $1500 and $6000. (Of course there are no guarantees; these are just average ballpark figures I gleaned from well drillers around this dry and spotty valley. Some parts of the U.S. may not have a water table anywhere near the surface and for all practical purposes, no matter how deep you drill or how much money you have, you may never hit water at all.)
The good news is that you wont have to drill to China in search of huge volumes of water because a windmill only pumps a few gallons a minute anyway. You can tell your well driller in advance to stop drilling when he reaches a depth that fulfills your limited requirement. Even a five-gallon-per-minute (gpm) well would be sufficient for a small windmill. There would be very little, if any, drawdown because the refreshment rate would be greater than the pump rate. Drawdown is the measurement of the static water level going down, down, down, as water is being used out of the well. A well with a windmill on it is constantly being replenished (static water level going up, up, up) when the wind is not blowing. There are two distinctly different methods of drilling a well. There is the rotary method, where a big auger on a boom truck drills a deep clean hole (not unlike a drill bit in a hand drill) and hits water when it gets to a water-bearing layer (aka water table). The other method is called cable drilling and basically hammers a hole through rock and other strata, fracturing everything in its path, causing each layer it goes through to release its water (if it has any). Proponents of this method claim they get more water all the way down than the conventional rotary method delivers. The geological debate can get downright steamy on this dry subject.
The windmill on the left is a Baker Monitor vaneless (no tail) with football counterweight. Folding wheel opens and closes the hole in the middle to regulate the speed.
Windmill maintenance
Maintenance on a windmill is minimal: 10-weight oil or ATF (automatic transmission fluid) in the gears should be changed every year, a little grease in the bearings in the turn-table (between the gearbox and the top of the tower) applied at the same time, and the leathers replaced every two to six years, depending on how much sand you have in your water. A thing called a stuffing box(usually solid brass) has to be repacked and the nut tightened occasionally. This curious-sounding component is a simple design and an easy to understand concept if you see it working, but hard to explain on paper. Its what caps off the top of the wells pipe (the cylinder is at the bottom of the pipe). The pump rod goes up and down through a hole in the stuffing box (which is stuffed with graphite rope). This stuffing (aka packing) allows only enough water to leak out around the hole to lubricate the up and down action of the rod. When the packing gets old it allows too much water to squirt out. Then its time to unscrew the nut on the unit, put some more packing in, and tighten the nut down good and tight. Without the stuffing box there would be metal rubbing on metal, wearing the rod away in no time. Same thing would happen without seals on the cylinder plunger. A stuffing box is only needed on a windmill if you have to pump water uphill to a tank, but not needed if your water will go downhill to a storage tank, or horizontally into a watering trough or pond.
I just finished putting a coat of Thoroseal on the inside of the holding tank.
When the flag is almost dragging on the roof I know its time to click on the 35 gpm, 2-HP pump down below and set the timer for about four hours. When the flag is dancing in the breeze three-feet above the roof, that means the water tank is fulland Im happy. I built the holding tank to eliminate the need for a captive-air tank in the pump house (small steel water-tank with an air bladder inside). It works on a pressure-gauge system that turns the submersible pump on and off constantly as the bladder compresses or expands (when the tank fills and empties). This action eventually wears out the pumps starting capacitor. With 10 thirsty acres to irrigate, the pump would have had to cycle on and off every few minutes all summer long. My stored water supply is gravity-distributed for irrigation and household use upon demand via a maze of pipelines and on/off valves (non-siphoning type) that staggers even my imagination and Im the one who did it. As I developed the property over the years, I crisscrossed the land with thousands of feet of additional water lines as needed. I used inexpensive -inch utility polypipe (about 7/ft.) for landscape irrigation, and poked a hole or two with an ice pick wherever I planted a bush or tree. Its the poor mans answer to drip irrigation.
The floating bucket filled with air, and flag pole secured with guide so the wind cant push it over at an angle above the roof. Breezeways are screened.
This gravity-feed system and flag-pole alert has worked great for 20 years now. Im so glad I bought a hill to live on. Gravity is free and gives me 70 lbs. of water pressure down below and 40 lbs. at the house (the halfway point on the hill), which is plenty. (Figure every 100 feet-of-head equals 43 lbs. pressure). Since I use a drip irrigation system, even low pressure up near the tank works fine. For long-range self-sufficiency and in case the power goes off, I put in a second well (low-capacity) adjacent to the holding tank, and put a small windmill on it (six-foot diameter wheel). Whenever the wind blows, which is often, it pumps two gpm into the tank and supplements the water supply. An overflow pipe exiting the top of the tank feeds a small pond that nature has generously stocked with frogs and mosquitoes. The county vector supplies free mosquito fish, hardy little critters that vacuum up mosquito larvae faster than they can hatch, so everything balances out. I planted hybrid poplars around the pond, and they grew huge in no time, so now I have a shady oasis to hide in from the summer sun while the dogs jump in the pond and cool off. Life on the hill is good. The windmill purrs and the frogs croak. Years ago I almost let a fast-talking salesman sucker me into buying an elaborate and expensive water-level gauge system of brass and copper ball cocks and levers floating in the tank (like a toilet-flushing mechanism) that would turn my pump on and off automatically when the water went above or below a certain level, While you sit in your easy chair eating chocolates, he said. It sounded like a good idea (the chocolate part), but it would have required a quarter mile of buried electrical cable and a complicated hook-
The finished tank and my windmill. Even though the tank and flag are far away, theres no problem seeing the flag even during a snow storm in winter.
up system. My water is high in calcium and other minerals so every part would have already corroded beyond recognition and jammed up. Being economically-challenged, I came up with a cheap solution and sent Mr. Bells and Whistles on his way. (Instead of eating candy, I run down to turn the pump on and stay slim.) My advice to new land owners is to think long and hard before buying gadgets that will eventually need repairs or replacement. Think long-range, think simplicity, think self-sufficiency. Thats what the Backwoods Home philosophy is all about.
The three illustrations that accompany this article are from The New AlchemyWater-Pumping Windmill Book by Gary Hirschberg. Copyright by the author and reprinted with permission from St. Martins Press, LLC.