No Water
We find why the water stopped: pump, switch, tank, or wiring.
No water or low pressure on a well? Clog Hunter handles well pump repair the honest way: we test the whole system (pump, pressure tank, and switch), find what actually failed, and fix it. The rural water work the big-city outfits don’t want.
400+ Google reviewsWhen the water quits on a well, most people assume the pump. Sometimes it is, but just as often it’s a waterlogged pressure tank, a worn pressure switch, a bad capacitor, or the wiring. Swapping a good pump for a new one fixes nothing and costs plenty.
So we test. We check the pressure tank charge, the switch, the electrical, and the pump itself, and tell you which part actually failed. Then we repair or replace exactly that, submersible or jet pump, and get your water back on.
Well PumpEastern OK What We Handle
We find why the water stopped: pump, switch, tank, or wiring.
Pressure that drops or rapidly cycles on and off, diagnosed and fixed.
A waterlogged or failed tank replaced and charged correctly.
The switch that tells the pump when to run, tested and replaced.
Submersible or jet pump repaired, or replaced when it’s truly done.
Capacitors, control boxes, and wiring that keep the pump running.
On a well and lost your water or pressure? We’ll find the real cause first. Get a free estimate.
When To Call
A total loss of water usually means the pump or its controls have failed.
Weak, fluctuating, or rapidly cycling pressure points to the tank or switch.
A pump that won’t shut off is working too hard and headed for a burnout.
Air spitting from the tap or gritty water can mean the well level or pump is failing.
Live job log
7 recent jobs3 towns real photos updated as we complete the work
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Good Questions
It is usually the pump, the pressure switch, the pressure tank, or the wiring, and sometimes a tripped breaker or a bad capacitor. We test the system to find which one failed instead of just swapping the most expensive part and hoping.
Rapid on-off cycling or falling pressure often means a waterlogged pressure tank or a failing pressure switch, not necessarily the pump. We check the tank charge and the switch first, because replacing a pump that did not fail helps no one.
Yes: submersible pumps down the well and jet pumps up top. We diagnose and repair the whole system: the pump, the pressure tank, the switch, and the wiring that ties them together.
It depends. A pressure switch, capacitor, or tank is a repair. A pump that has truly burned out or a well that has dropped below the pump gets a replacement. We tell you which one you are actually looking at before you spend on a new pump.
No water is an emergency out here, and we treat it like one. We are local, so we are not coming from hours away. Call and we will get to you as fast as the road allows.
Call a local crew that knows well systems. We’ll test the pump, tank, and switch, tell you what actually failed, and give you a straight price first.
or call (918) 731-2337