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low producing well for a residential home in central Pennsylvania. Well is approx. 400 feet deep.

2006-06-27 11:53:25 · 4 answers · asked by Stacey K 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

4 answers

Is this an old well, or is it one that was drilled in the last few years? Did it produce adequate water at one time and now replenishes slow, or has it always been slow? Are you sure it is the well and not the pump? If it is a recently drilled well, why was it drilled to 400'. What kind of credentials does the person who is recommending this have and are there any guarantees. You get the picture.

If it were my problem, I would do a lot of investigating before I made a decision.

Good luck with your problem.

2006-07-03 10:52:40 · answer #1 · answered by exbuilder 7 · 9 0

it has be replied many cases by potential of a few of those human beings yet princess defined it in a protracted element and AA defined it in a simplified short answer and right this is the element look back at your existence, seeing which you have been a baby, till the place you stand perfect now think of your have been ignorant all which you will lose from that component to this and to the destiny this is your fee, the fee of your lack of awareness ( no longer calling you ignorant, purely making an occasion ) then think of although of the excellent component approximately lack of awareness then examine the two positive factors and you tell me this is the severe priced one

2016-12-14 02:49:39 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Before you do it, talk to your driller. Typically hydrofracting may not help, a new well may have to be drilled.

2006-06-28 06:04:45 · answer #3 · answered by sped1018 3 · 0 0

Call that an answer?

2015-10-11 03:00:32 · answer #4 · answered by C H 1 · 0 0

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