These are not the most efficent pumps but can pump quite alot of water if need be. I've seen a few of these and usually, they are used where there is a lot of sand because there are no valves to plug up. Sometimes they are used to clean out a well of all the surrounding sand before a typical pump is installed.
They are also sometimes used in dredging operations and many treasure hunting operations. You might try googleing "air lift" and maybe dredge or salvage.
i had some negative thought about it, and that was airating water feeds stuff that needs oxygen to survive in the water, so algie and whatever bio materials that prefer oxegenated water would thrive more.having the line lower in the well gets it closer to the crud that settles at the bottom.
but what do i know about wells , NOTHING :-)
Anyone know if an air compressor will still run slow, just not as fast if I hook it up to a mill? If not I may have to rig up a bike pump or something.
After a well is dug the well head is pumped this way they cal this jetting the well .I know this not what your talking. A half inch pipe must set far enough below table to get water to percolate up . I did this one time to water a garden and noticed the plants were very hardy . I had a 1 " pipe at the bottm of the well and pressurized the casing .
I am not too sure how it would work at lower rpm but it is rated for a maximum of 1200 rpm. I imagine there would be some coging issues when the pressure was built up say over about 50psi but I thought of adding a small motor/generator on an idler to give it a jumpstart when needed. It could charge it's own battery. The only thing I haven't quite figured out is the wind speed switch to engage the contacts on the motor.
Just a thought.
I think 3 to 1 gear ration at a 150-200 blade rpm would be good, with some good heavy blades, or maybe a flywheel.
Here are a few links demonstrating and stating water oxygenation benifits:
http://www.agr.gc.ca/pfra/flash/dugout/en/dugout_e.htm
http://www.canadianpond.ca/aeratione.html
http://www.fish.wa.gov.au/aqua/broc/aquainfo/aqinfo20.html
http://www.lake-aeration.com/Fish_Kills_In_ponds_lakes.asp
Barnac
Thanks,Jim