From farmhouses off Highway 28 to rural homes out toward the Frenchman Hills, we keep Quincy wells pumping. No water? Call (509) 224-3484 any hour.
Quincy sits in the heart of Columbia Basin farm country, and out here a working well isn't optional. Plenty of homes around Quincy, George, and the Crescent Bar area run on private domestic wells, often right next door to big irrigation operations. When your pump quits in July and it's 100 degrees, you need someone who answers the phone. That's us.
Wenatchee Well Pros handles well pump repair, full pump replacement, and pressure tank service across Grant County. We know what Quincy ground does to a pump. The sandy soil in the basin sends fine sediment into wells, and that grit wears out impellers, clogs screens, and chews through check valves faster than most folks expect. We size and set pumps to handle it.
Weak pressure, short cycling, breaker trips, or no water at all. We diagnose Quincy submersible and jet pumps on the first visit and carry common parts on the truck.
When a pump is done, we replace it with one sized for your well's depth and the sediment load common in Quincy Basin sand. Most swaps are finished the same day.
Waterlogged tanks and bad pressure switches kill pumps early. We test, recharge, or replace pressure tanks for homes and small farms around Quincy and George.
Livestock, orchards, and families can't wait until Monday. Call (509) 224-3484 day or night and we'll get water flowing back to your Quincy property fast.
The Quincy Basin is built on sand, gravel, and old flood deposits, and that's great for growing potatoes but hard on well pumps. Fine sand gets pulled into the well and runs through your pump like liquid sandpaper. We see it constantly: worn impellers, gritty pressure tanks, faucet screens that clog every few weeks.
If your water has been looking cloudy or you're finding sand in the toilet tank, don't ignore it. Sediment that reaches your fixtures has already been grinding on your pump. We can check the pump's setting depth, inspect the screen, and in many cases raise the pump or add protection that buys you years of extra life.
For wells with chronic sand issues, a properly sized pump matters more than anything. An oversized pump pulls water too fast and drags sediment up with it. We match flow rate to your well's actual recovery, which is the single best fix we know for sandy Quincy wells.
Most pumps give you warnings before they die. Pressure that drops when the sprinklers kick on. A pump that clicks on and off every minute or two. Air spitting from faucets. Power bills creeping up because the pump is running longer to do the same job. Any one of these is worth a phone call before it turns into a no-water morning.
Summers around Quincy are brutal on pumps. When it's hot and dry from June through September, irrigation demand peaks and water tables can drop, so a tired pump that limped through spring often quits in the worst week of the year. If your pump is 12 to 15 years old and showing symptoms, it's smart to plan a replacement on your schedule instead of an emergency one. Our well pump cost guide lays out real numbers so you know what to expect.
We serve Quincy, George, Crescent Bar, and the farm roads in between, plus Moses Lake and the rest of Grant County. We're based in the Wenatchee Valley, about 35 minutes up Highway 28, so we can usually get a truck to Quincy the same day you call. Free estimates, licensed and insured in Washington, and we'll give you a straight answer on repair versus replace.
Domestic wells, stock wells, small irrigation systems, we work on all of them. We've pulled pumps from shallow sand points near the river and from deep wells punched through basalt on the benches above town. Every job gets a clear written quote before we start.
If you've got no water right now, skip the form and call (509) 224-3484. Our emergency well service runs 24/7, weekends and holidays included.
Usually the same day, often within a few hours. We're about 35 minutes from Quincy via Highway 28 and we run 24/7 emergency service. Call (509) 224-3484 and we'll give you an honest arrival window when you call.
The Quincy Basin sits on sandy, gravelly soil, and fine sediment gets pulled into wells, especially when a pump is set too low or oversized for the well. Sand in your water means it's also wearing on your pump. We can inspect the well, adjust the pump depth, and recommend a fix before the grit destroys the pump entirely.
Most residential submersible pump replacements run in the $1,800 to $4,500 range depending on well depth, pump size, and wiring condition. Deep wells and larger pumps for farm use cost more. We give free written estimates before any work starts, and our well pump cost guide has detailed numbers.
Both. We service domestic wells, stock wells, and small private irrigation wells across Grant County. We don't handle the big Columbia Basin Project canal systems, but if it's a private well on your property, we can repair or replace the pump and pressure system.
Free written estimates. Emergency no-water calls answered around the clock.