A cold shower that never warms up. A pressure gauge stuck at zero. A pressure switch clicking, clicking… then silence. When a well pump quits, you don’t just lose water—you lose your day, your plans, and sometimes your groceries if the fridge water dispenser is your only drinking source. In rural homes, there is no municipal backstop. The system has to work, and when it doesn’t, the fallout is immediate.
Two Saturdays ago, I took a call from the Nakamura family outside Colville, Washington. Carlos Nakamura (41), a timber framer, and his wife, Mei (38), a school nurse, live on 12 acres with their kids—Ava (9) and Leo (6). Their 260-foot private well feeds the house, garden hydrants, and a small barn. Their four-year-old budget-brand 3/4 HP submersible had failed overnight—bearing noise for weeks, then a hard stop. With guests arriving that afternoon, they needed water back, fast. Their old control box was corroded, their pump curve was mismatched, and the system had been short-cycling for months. That’s a triple threat I see too often.
This is exactly why the PSAM Myers pump warranty matters. It’s not just fine print. It’s operational insurance that keeps rural life moving. In this list, I’ll unpack the 10 coverage essentials that come with a PSAM-supplied Myers pump—what’s covered, what’s not, and how you can use the warranty smartly. We’ll talk about the industry-leading 3-year term, Pentek XE motor coverage, stainless-steel component protection, sand/grit realities, installation requirements, 2-wire vs 3-wire expectations, lightning and thermal protection, and what you need on the invoice to make claims painless. Whether you’re replacing a failed unit or building new, this breakdown gives you a clear picture of how PSAM and Myers stand behind your water.
Let’s get your confidence back where your water pressure belongs—up.
#1. Industry-Leading 3-Year Warranty Term – 36 Months of PSAM + Myers Protection on Submersible and Jet Pump Systems
A warranty is only valuable if it outlasts typical failure modes. Myers’ 36-month term is built around real-world wear patterns, not marketing copy. It covers defects in materials and workmanship on qualifying models, including the Myers Pumps Predator Plus Series submersible well pump line and key jet pump models.

The backbone here is construction: 300 series stainless steel shells and discharge bowls reduce corrosion points; Teflon-impregnated staging and self-lubricating impellers resist abrasive wear; and the Pentek XE motor delivers high thrust and better heat dissipation. That hardware, paired with PSAM’s documentation and technical support, is why we confidently stand at 36 months when others won’t. Covered issues typically include premature seal failures, motor defects, impeller bonding issues, and manufacturing anomalies—subject to proper installation and application.
For the Nakamuras, the 3-year term was decisive. After two underperforming replacements in six years, they wanted a pump that wouldn’t make them a weekend emergency again. We set them up with a 1 HP, 10 GPM Myers Predator Plus, properly staged for a 260-foot TDH requirement, and walked them through the warranty registration.
What “36 Months” Means in Practice
Three years from the date of installation (with proof), or from purchase if install date can’t be verified. Keep your PSAM invoice and installer’s note. That’s your ticket for hassle-free claims.
Covered vs. Not Covered (High Level)
Covered: manufacturing defects, early motor failure, impeller/stage issues, seal defects. Not covered: dry-running damage, mis-sizing, improper wiring, sand-heavy conditions beyond spec.
Registration and Documentation
Register the pump serial number, model, and GPM rating at install. Attach the pressure switch setting and pressure tank capacity in your notes for better service history.
Pro Tip from Rick
Make a system “passport” sheet—model, depth, wire size, drop pipe length, check valve location, cut-in/cut-out pressures. Keep it with your invoice. It shortens claim time dramatically.
Key takeaway: If you’re replacing a system and want coverage that aligns with real lifespans, the PSAM-Myers 36-month term is the benchmark.
#2. Pentek XE High-Thrust Motor Coverage – Thermal and Lightning Protection That Actually Saves Pumps
Motor reliability determines whether you’re showering or calling me. The Pentek XE motor used in Myers well pump packages is part of the warranty umbrella and includes thermal overload protection and lightning protection features that guard against abuse events common in rural grids.
Technically speaking, high-thrust designs tolerate higher axial loads from multi-stage impellers without bearing collapse. Paired with precise winding insulation and a balanced rotor, you get cooler operation and higher best efficiency point (BEP) performance. Overtemperature shutoff prevents a minor well drawdown from burning your motor; surge-resistant design helps with storm-season spikes. If a factory defect shows up in winding insulation or thrust bearing, you’re covered.
Carlos and Mei’s area sees summer lightning. Their old pump’s motor had scorch marks near the leads—classic surge entry. With the Myers upgrade, they gained surge-resistant architecture and better protection logic. That alone can extend life several seasons.
Thermal Overload Protection
Trips before catastrophic heat damage. Once water returns to the intake and the motor cools, it resets. This prevents heat-scoring and winding damage.
Lightning-Resistant Design
Built-in features reduce vulnerability to common surges. Add a panel-mounted whole-house surge protector for belt-and-suspenders protection.
Coverage Conditions
Surge damage is complex. Factory defects are covered; catastrophic external events may not be. Document your electrical setup and protections to support claims.
Rick’s Recommendation
Use 230V with properly sized conductors and a dedicated breaker. Keep motor amps at or below nameplate under load. It’s good practice and good for claims.
Bottom line: Smart motor protection is part of why Myers pumps run longer—and are easier to support under warranty.
#3. Stainless Steel That Stands Up – 300 Series Components Covered Against Premature Corrosion and Failures
Few things kill a pump faster than corrosive water attacking its weak points. Myers submersible well pump models use 300 series stainless steel in the shell, discharge bowl, shaft, coupling, wear ring, and suction screen—a combination that reduces pitting and thread seizure, especially in mineral-heavy or slightly acidic wells.
From a warranty perspective, if stainless components fail early due to manufacturing defects or incorrect alloy treatment, you’re in safe territory. If water chemistry is outside reasonable potable ranges (very low pH or chlorides), we’ll help you confirm the application before installation to protect coverage.
For the Nakamuras, we tested pH and hardness (7.1 pH; moderately hard). Stainless is the smart play here. Their previous unit had mild steel fasteners that fused into a maintenance nightmare. The Myers threaded assembly broke down easily on the bench—no cutting wheels required.
Threaded Assembly Advantage
A threaded assembly lets you service stages without trashing the entire pump end. That’s less downtime and a warranty claim that’s easier to evaluate and resolve.
Intake Screen and Cable Guard
Stainless intake screen resists deformation; the cable guard prevents wire chafe. If a screen weld fails early, that’s covered. If a rock crushes it, that’s application damage.
Warranty Tip
Add a pre-install note on your water chemistry. It shows due diligence and helps PSAM advocate for you if a metallurgical issue surfaces.
Close the loop: Stainless done right turns warranty fine print into real protection.
#4. Teflon-Impregnated Staging – Abrasion Resistance that Myers Warranties Back When Factory Defects Surface
Sand doesn’t care about your weekend plans. It sands bearings, erodes impeller edges, and turns marginal pumps into scrap. Myers combats this with Teflon-impregnated staging and engineered composite impellers that are self-lubricating and highly resistant to grit.
Here’s the nuance: No warranty covers pumping dense sand loads outside spec. But when staging materials fail prematurely due to defective molding, bonding, or improper tolerances, you’re covered. In normal sandy wells—fine particulates, intermittent events—Myers staging outlasts conventional plastics and is easier on motor thrust bearings.
Mei noticed light grit in the tub after heavy August irrigation—classic drawdown plus silt. With the Predator Plus pump and a properly set pressure switch (40/60) and adequate pressure tank drawdown, cycling slowed and staging lived in its comfort zone. Abrasion dropped, noisy starts disappeared.
Composite Impellers and Bearings
High-lubricity surfaces lower friction and wear. In warranty terms, defective impeller hubs or warped stages are eligible when installation is sound.
Practical Limits
If a well suddenly produces sand due to casing damage, that’s not a pump defect. We’ll help you diagnose and protect your system.
Rick’s Field Note
Add a torque arrestor and align your drop pipe straight. Misalignment scrubs the cable and can mimic “sand damage” symptoms over time.
Key point: Myers’ stage design buys you time in abrasive conditions—and the warranty backs true defects.
#5. Real Coverage on Real Problems – What the PSAM Myers Warranty Typically Covers (and Doesn’t)
Coverage clarity keeps “no water” from becoming “no good options.” With psam myers pump purchases, you get a clear, written warranty that typically covers:
- Factory defects in the pump end: seals, stages, housings, shaft/coupling issues Motor defects under normal loads: winding, thrust bearing, thermal assembly Early failure in major components: internal check valve, coupler fitment, stage stacks Manufacturing anomalies: leaks at crimps, faulty intake screen welds
Not covered:
- Misapplication: wrong HP/flow vs. pump curve, severe TDH mismatch Dry-running or dead-heading damage Wiring errors, wrong voltage, undersized conductors Excessive sand beyond spec or casing failure events Frozen equipment from poor winterization
For the Nakamuras, we documented the well depth (260 ft), wire gauge, control box specs, pressure tank size (62 gallons), and static water level. That documentation ensures any claim reviews fast with minimal back-and-forth.
Claim Essentials
Keep your PSAM invoice, serial number, and install date. Record pressures, amperage draw, and voltage drop under load at install.
Turnaround Expectations
PSAM coordinates evaluation and return authorizations. In most cases, we’ll work to keep you in water while the claim processes.
Installer vs DIY
DIY is allowed when the install meets code and spec. Sloppy splices or missing pitless adapter seals risk denial.
Bottom line: Clear paperwork and proper application make coverage work exactly as intended.
#6. Sizing and Curves Matter to Coverage – Match HP, GPM, and Head Using Rick’s Pump Curve Method
Undersized pumps run hot and die young; oversized pumps short-cycle and kill motors. Warranty claims often come down to sizing mistakes. Correct matching of 1/2 HP, 3/4 HP, 1 HP, 1.5 HP, or 2 HP models to your TDH and GPM rating is both a performance and protection issue.
My method is simple: calculate static head, friction loss, and desired pressure. Plot it against the pump curve to land near the BEP at your average demand. For a 260 ft well with 10 GPM household use and a 40/60 switch, the Nakamuras needed a 1 HP, 10 GPM, multi-stage deep well pump with a shut-off head near 400–450 ft. That gives margin without surging past set pressures.
Documentation That Protects
Include your curve point on your install sheet. It proves the pump wasn’t doomed by misapplication and speeds up warranty approvals.
Control Strategy
Use a properly sized pressure tank to reduce cycles. Aim for 1–2 minutes of runtime minimum per cycle at average demand.
Electrical Integrity
Stick to 230V for 1 HP and up. Confirm amperage draw under load matches nameplate. Low voltage kills windings and claims.
Summary: The right curve match is the quiet partner of every valid warranty.
#7. 2-Wire vs 3-Wire Systems – How Configuration Affects Warranty Experience, Installation Cost, and Service
Configuration doesn’t change the warranty term, but it affects installation quality and serviceability—both affect claim outcomes. 2-wire well pump systems simplify installation (no external control box), fewer parts, fewer points of failure. 3-wire well pump systems put the start components topside for easier service but add complexity.
Myers offers both. With Predator Plus Series, many homes at 100–300 ft do great on 2-wire 230V—fast installs, fewer connections, excellent reliability. The Nakamuras chose 2-wire to eliminate an aging control box. Fewer components, fewer headaches.
Warranty Implications
A failed external start capacitor isn’t a pump defect. Going 2-wire means onboard components are within the motor assembly and part of the pump warranty.
Cost and Time
2-wire often saves $200–$400 in parts and labor. That keeps emergency replacements affordable and fast.
Rick’s Rule
At 1.5–2 HP or advanced control needs, 3-wire may make sense for service flexibility. Either way, document your wiring diagram and splices.
Takeaway: Pick the configuration that fits your depth and maintenance style—either way, Myers and PSAM have you covered.
#8. Installation Standards That Keep Your Warranty Solid – From Drop Pipe to Pitless Adapter
Every good warranty stands on a good install. Failure from poor plumbing or wiring isn’t covered by anyone, and that’s fair. I’ve seen pumps that should last 10 years die in 18 months because of a missing check valve or a kinked wire at the pitless adapter.
For the Nakamuras, we used 1-1/4" NPT drop pipe for minimal friction loss, a torque arrestor set below the casing joint, and a proper stainless safety rope. Splices used heat-shrink kits rated for submersible service. The pressure switch was set 40/60 with a tank pre-charge at 38 PSI.
Electrical Best Practices
Use correct gauge for run length. A 230V 1 HP motor needs less current than 115V, leading to lower voltage drop. Secure a clean ground and breaker.
Plumbing Practices
Install a secondary check valve topside only if manufacturer approves; avoid multiple checks that trap pressure. Ensure all unions are accessible.
Label Everything
Label the well cap with pump HP, install date, and drop length. That label has “saved” more than a few claims from confusion.
If you give the pump a fair environment, the warranty has clear footing to protect you.
#9. Field-Serviceable Design – Threaded Assembly Lets Pros Fix, Not Just Replace
This is where Myers separates itself for contractors and serious DIYers. The field serviceable threaded assembly of the Predator Plus Series means competent techs can open, inspect, and repair pump ends without destroying housings. That translates to lower lifetime cost and easier warranty diagnostics.
Serviceability isn’t an invitation to void coverage. It’s a path to safe, documentable inspection. If we find a defective stage stack or coupler machining issue, you can photograph, note serials, and work with PSAM to process a claim quickly—no hacksaw autopsies required.
The Nakamuras loved that we could break down the stack right at the shop bench. We verified clearances, noted pristine stage edges (no grit grooves), and recorded thrust endplay. Everything pointed to a healthy system—a comforting baseline for future support.
Contractor Advantage
Installers can address localized issues—say, a cracked diffuser—without scrapping a whole pump. Warranty claims get laser-focused on the defective part.
Owner Advantage
Fast turnarounds, less downtime, lower repair costs. That’s what you feel.
Rick’s Note
Field serviceability plus PSAM parts support is exactly how we keep you in water during warranty evaluations.
Serviceable by design, protected by policy—that’s how it should be.
#10. How Myers Warranty Stacks Up vs Goulds and Franklin – Real-World Differences That Save You Money
Comparisons should be fair, technical, and practical. Here’s how Myers—specifically the Predator Plus Series—compares to two brands you’ll see quoted often.
Technical Performance Analysis:
- Materials: Myers uses extensive 300 series stainless steel, while some Goulds Pumps submersibles retain cast iron components in certain assemblies—vulnerable in acidic or mineral-heavy water. Stainless resists pitting and thread seizure, keeping stage alignment true. Motors: Pentek XE motor in Myers offers robust thrust handling and thermal overload protection, achieving high hydraulic efficiency near BEP. Franklin Electric motors are respected, but often tied to proprietary or dealer-centric control ecosystems. Efficiency/Longevity: Myers’ 80%+ hydraulic efficiency at BEP lowers operating costs. Self-lubricating Teflon-impregnated staging extends life in light grit where standard composites wear.
Real-World Application Differences:
- Serviceability: Myers’ threaded assembly is a field tech’s friend—fast to open, simple to service. Franklin’s proprietary control components frequently require specialized dealer parts and access. Goulds’ iron elements can complicate disassembly after years downhole. Warranty/Cost: Myers offers a true 36-month term standard; many competitive packages hover at 12–18 months. That matters in real budgets, especially when you’re 20 miles from town and need water today.
Value Proposition Conclusion: If your well is your lifeline, Myers’ stainless build, Pentair-backed engineering, and PSAM support produce fewer surprises and faster resolutions. The three-year coverage, combined with energy savings and serviceability, is worth every single penny.
#11. What About Budget Brands Like Red Lion? Why Myers Warranty Wins Over Time
Red Lion has its place in shallow applications and light duty, but the warranty math tilts hard toward Myers in real well service.
Technical Performance Analysis:
- Construction: Red Lion commonly uses thermoplastic housings. Under thermal expansion and pressure cycling, plastics can stress-crack or deform—issues that often fall outside typical warranty coverage. Myers’ stainless steel shells and bowls keep geometry stable over years. Motor/Stages: Budget motors tend toward lower thrust capacity and simpler windings. Myers’ Pentek XE and engineered staging keep impellers tracking true under load, protecting bearings and maintaining GPM rating.
Real-World Application Differences:
- Lifespan: Many budget units deliver 3–5 years before major wear. Myers targets 8–15 years, with 20+ possible in ideal conditions. During that span, the 36-month warranty protects against early defects—budget brands typically offer 12 months or less. Service/Parts: Field servicing a budget pump can turn into a replace-not-repair situation. Myers’ field serviceable design means parts, not complete repurchases.
Value Proposition Conclusion: When your well is 200 feet down and your family depends on it, avoiding emergency replacements is the real savings. Myers’ materials, motor, and warranty deliver reliability that’s worth every single penny.
#12. What You Need to File a Smooth Claim – PSAM’s Checklist to Keep Your Water Flowing
Claims aren’t complicated when you have your ducks in a row. Here’s my checklist for a clean, fast process.
- Proof of purchase from PSAM with model and serial Install date (noted on invoice or contractor statement) System specs: well depth, static water level, drop length, discharge size (often 1-1/4"), and stages Electrical data: voltage, breaker size, measured amperage draw under load at install Pressure data: switch setting (e.g., 40/60), pressure tank pre-charge Photos: wiring splices, pitless adapter, pump label Failure description: symptoms, timeline, any grit/sand observation
For the Nakamuras, we logged all of this on day one. If a problem arises, PSAM can act quickly—often with a replacement plan while evaluation proceeds.
Common Pitfalls
Missing receipts, no install dates, or mismatched wiring are the top three reasons claims slow down. Avoid them.
Temporary Water Plan
Ask about loaner options or expedited shipping. PSAM prioritizes homes with no water.
Rick’s Final Tip
Call us first. A five-minute conversation can diagnose an install issue that saves you from unnecessary downtime and preserves coverage.
Prepared owners get resolutions—fast.
FAQ: Myers Warranty and Performance, Answered by Rick
1) How do I determine the correct horsepower for my well depth and household water demand?
Start with total dynamic head: static water level plus vertical lift to tank plus friction loss plus pressure. For a 40/60 switch, add 50–70 PSI (~115–160 ft head). Map that duty point to the pump curve to land near the BEP. A typical 3–4 bedroom home uses 8–12 GPM. At 150–300 ft TDH, a 1 HP or 1.5 HP multi-stage pump is common. If you irrigate or fill livestock tanks, bump flow to 12–15 GPM and verify shut-off head gives margin. The Myers Predator Plus Series offers 7–20+ GPM across 1/2 HP to 2 HP in 230V single-phase. My recommendation: send PSAM your depth, static level, and fixture count—we’ll size it and protect your warranty by documenting the selection.
2) What GPM flow rate does a typical household need and how do multi-stage impellers affect pressure?
Most homes are served well at 10 GPM continuous. Spurts like showers plus a washer push momentary demand. Multi-stage impellers build pressure in steps—more stages mean more head at the same horsepower. For example, a Myers 10 GPM 1 HP with 12–15 stages delivers solid pressure at 200–300 ft TDH. Keep the pump curve in its sweet spot and the pressure switch in harmony with tank drawdown. The result is stable pressure and long lifespan. For the Nakamuras, 10 GPM at ~260 ft TDH matched perfectly, keeping amps below nameplate and protecting their warranty.
3) How does the Myers Predator Plus Series achieve 80% hydraulic efficiency compared to competitors?
Efficiency comes from precise diffuser geometry, tight stage clearances, and a high-thrust Pentek XE motor keeping impellers aligned under load. Less slippage inside the stage equals more water moved per watt. Operating near BEP is critical; PSAM sizes for your head and flow so the pump lives in that band. Systems tuned like this can shave 15–20% off energy costs vs lower-efficiency peers—real savings over 10 years while staying squarely within warranty parameters.
4) Why is 300 series stainless steel superior to cast iron for submersible well pumps?
Underwater, 300 series stainless steel resists corrosion that can pit, seize threads, or deform sealing surfaces. Cast iron can corrode in acidic or mineral-heavy wells, leading to stage misalignment and performance loss. Stainless maintains structural integrity longer, making the pump more corrosion resistant and easier to service—the exact conditions warranties are designed to support. In the field, I’ve opened 10-year-old Myers stainless units that disassembled cleanly—try that with iron that’s seen low pH for a decade.
5) How do Teflon-impregnated self-lubricating impellers resist sand and grit damage?
Teflon-impregnated staging provides a slick, wear-resistant surface. Fine abrasives that would chew ordinary plastics glide with less friction, protecting edge profiles and maintaining GPM rating. It’s not a free pass to pump sand, but it buys you durability in real wells where minor silt events happen. When sand load spikes occur—post-drawdown or after heavy irrigation—the materials recover better. Myers warranties cover manufacturing defects; keeping grit within spec and using proper screens and set depths myers pump submersible keeps you in the clear.
6) What makes the Pentek XE high-thrust motor more efficient than standard well pump motors?
Thrust handling keeps the rotor centered and the impellers stable, reducing internal friction. Combine that with efficient windings and thermal overload protection, and you reduce heat loss and protect the motor during low-flow or no-flow events. The result: lower amperage draw for a given output and fewer heat-related failures. In 1 HP and 1.5 HP models, I consistently measure clean, near-nameplate amps and cooler operation, which the warranty likes to see in post-install data.
7) Can I install a Myers submersible pump myself or do I need a licensed contractor?
You can DIY if you follow code and manufacturer instructions. That means correct drop pipe, wire sizing, waterproof wire splice kit, secure pitless adapter, and correct tank and pressure switch settings. Document everything. Warranties require proper installation; sloppy splices, wrong voltage, or trapped check valves can void claims. If you’re unsure, hire a pro for the pull and set, and do the trenching and tank work yourself. PSAM can connect you with installers who know Myers.
8) What’s the difference between 2-wire and 3-wire well pump configurations?
A 2-wire configuration houses start components in the motor—simpler install, fewer parts, lower upfront cost. A 3-wire configuration uses an external control box with start capacitor and relay—easier topside service of start components, a bit more complexity. Warranty terms are the same; just know a failed external capacitor isn’t a pump defect. For 1 HP at moderate depth, I like 2-wire for simplicity. At higher horsepower or advanced controls, 3-wire can make sense. PSAM will advise based on your layout.
9) How long should I expect a Myers Predator Plus pump to last with proper maintenance?
You should see 8–15 years in typical residential duty, longer if sized at BEP with clean power and good tank sizing. I’ve pulled Myers units at 18–22 years still running. Maintenance isn’t heavy: check tank air charge annually, test voltage and amperage under load, inspect for cycling frequency, and watch for sediment after heavy use. Good wiring, correct pressure tank size, and appropriate stages for your head make the difference. The 3-year warranty covers early defects; good design carries you the rest of the way.
10) What maintenance tasks extend well pump lifespan and how often should they be performed?
- Annual: verify tank pre-charge (2 PSI below cut-in), check pressure switch contacts, inspect for leaks Every 2–3 years: test amperage under load vs nameplate, confirm voltage at the panel and wellhead After heavy irrigation periods: monitor for sediment in fixtures, flush lines if necessary After storms: verify breakers and consider surge protection Log all readings. It helps diagnose small issues before they jeopardize the motor—and it preserves your warranty with proof of responsible ownership.
11) How does Myers’ 3-year warranty compare to competitors and what does it cover?
Three years is top-tier—many competitors offer 12–18 months. Myers’ coverage includes defects in the pump end and motor assembly when installed correctly for a suitable application. Myers Pumps back their construction with NSF, UL, and CSA certified quality, and PSAM streamlines claims with clear documentation. Bottom line: longer coverage with better materials is not just marketing—it’s risk reduction.
12) What’s the total cost of ownership over 10 years: Myers vs budget pump brands?
Factor purchase price, electricity, repairs, and replacements. Myers’ high hydraulic efficiency (80%+ at BEP) trims energy 15–20%. The 8–15 year lifespan means you’re likely buying once, not twice. Budget pumps often fail in 3–5 years, meaning two or even three purchases in a decade plus labor and downtime. Add the 36-month warranty protection vs 12 months typical, and your risk profile shrinks. In practice, Myers wins on both dollars and days-with-water.
Conclusion: The Warranty That Actually Works in the Field
When your well is your lifeline, coverage can’t just be a paragraph in a manual; it has to stand up when your kitchen faucet goes dry. With troubleshooting Myers deep well pumps PSAM supplying your Myers water well pumps, you get more than a great pump—you get a 36-month safety net, real motor protections, stainless steel durability, and service-friendly design that makes claims fast and fair. We size to the pump curve, document the install, and keep your system in the efficiency band that delivers pressure, cuts power bills, and extends life.
Carlos and Mei are back to showers that don’t surprise them, garden taps that don’t sputter, and weekends that don’t involve hauling water. That’s the point of premium equipment and a warranty that means something. If you’re ready to size your myers submersible well pump or compare a myers jet pump for a shallow application, call PSAM. I’ll make sure you get the right unit, the right setup, and the right coverage—so your water is there when you need it.
Rick’s final word: Invest once, document well, and run near BEP. With Myers and PSAM behind you, that peace of mind is worth every single penny.