This is for you if your basement floods, your water pressure drops, or you're not sure when your pump was last serviced.
You live in Inman, KS where basement water is a reality. Or maybe your well pump just died and you have no water. Pumps are invisible until they fail — then they become urgent and expensive. You need someone who understands pump systems completely, sizes them correctly, and maintains them so they don't fail at the worst time.
Basements in Inman collect groundwater naturally. A sump pump removes that water before it becomes a problem. Proper installation means correct sizing, proper discharge line routing, and adequate power. Wrong installation fails within months.
What you experience: Water entering your basement is collected and pumped away before damage occurs. You stay dry. No panic. No water damage restoration bills.
Pumps fail gradually or suddenly. Worn bearings, failed switches, clogged discharge lines — we diagnose which issue affects yours and fix it. Often repair buys you time until planned replacement.
When repair makes sense: Pump is under 7 years old, damage is isolated, and replacement can be scheduled later.
If you're not on municipal water, your well pump is critical. Installation requires proper depth assessment, capacity sizing, and pressure tank setup. Mistakes here mean low pressure, frequent pump cycles, or complete failure.
What you get: Water pressure that stays consistent. No pressure surges that damage fixtures. A system that lasts 10+ years with proper maintenance.
Well pumps show warning signs before failure — reduced flow, pressure fluctuations, unusual sounds. Annual maintenance catches these early. Most failures are preventable.
Best practice: Annual inspection and pressure tank maintenance. You'll know about problems before they strand you without water.
Imagine walking through your basement after a heavy rain with zero anxiety about flooding. Imagine turning on a faucet and water flowing at full pressure, every time. Imagine not stressing about an old pump that might quit tomorrow. That's what reliable pump service delivers:
Pump assessment. We inspect your existing pump, test its flow rate and pressure, and diagnose condition. Age, noise level, and performance history tell us if repair or replacement is needed.
Proper sizing. For replacements, we calculate the right pump capacity based on your home's size, drainage requirements, and water demand. Oversizing wastes energy. Undersizing fails when you need it most.
Installation with attention to detail. We install proper discharge lines with correct slope, install check valves to prevent backflow, wire everything to code, and set up system monitoring. Not just bolting it in — building it to last.
Testing and documentation. After installation, we run the pump multiple times and confirm proper operation. You get documentation of what was done and warranty information.
A family in Inman had their well pump fail mid-summer with no water. Emergency replacement cost more and happened in panic mode. Now they do annual maintenance with us. Last year's inspection caught a failing bearing before failure. Preventive replacement cost less than emergency service and happened on their schedule. Same family, same pump system — but now with confidence instead of dread.
A: Annual inspection minimum. Heavy rain seasons warrant checking twice yearly. During inspection, we test the pump, clean the sump pit, confirm the discharge line isn't frozen or blocked, and verify the check valve works.
A: Sump pump removes water that enters your basement. Well pump brings water up from underground into your home. We handle both.
A: Depends on age and damage. Most pumps last 7–10 years. If it's newer and the issue is a check valve, we repair it. If the pump itself is failing, replacement makes sense.
A: Sump pump: $800–$1,500 installed. Well pump: $1,200–$2,500 depending on depth and capacity.