Mon-Fri 8am-5pm 4.6 rating · 84 reviews
(830) 816-3232
Serving Round Mountain & Blanco County

Water well repair in Round Mountain

Lost water pressure, a pump that quit, or air sputtering at the tap? TR Drilling repairs and services water wells across Round Mountain and Blanco County, and we prioritize no-water calls for same-day help.

TR Drilling fixes the everyday well problems Round Mountain homeowners and ranchers run into: low or lost water pressure, no water at all, air sputtering and spitting at the faucet, dirty or cloudy water, a pump that short-cycles on and off, a pump that never seems to shut off, and outright pump failure. Most of these turn out to be routine fixes once you find the real cause, and a repair is usually far more affordable than drilling a new well. That is why we diagnose the whole system, the pump, the pressure tank, the pressure switch, the wiring, and the well itself, before we recommend a single part, because the symptom you notice at the house is often not where the trouble actually lives.

Wells around Round Mountain draw from the Middle and Lower Trinity Aquifer, and they commonly run several hundred feet or more, with the productive zones sitting deep beneath the limestone of this northern Blanco County ranch country. That depth is exactly why pump and pressure problems show up the way they do out here: a deep setting puts steady strain on the pump and motor, and on larger ranch tracts heavy draw can pull the level down faster than a shallow well would. When static levels drop during the multi-year Hill Country drought, a pump set for a fuller well can start drawing air, losing prime, and short-cycling. Out toward Johnson City, Marble Falls, and the spreads along US 281, a correct diagnosis matters even more, because a deep pull is no place to guess.

TR Drilling has been the established, professional name Blanco County well owners call since 1985, fully licensed and insured, with more than 40 years of work in this exact country. We lead with a real diagnosis instead of a sales pitch, explain what we find in plain terms, and tell you honestly whether a repair or a full pump replacement is the smarter money for your well, not just the bigger ticket. We register the work through the Blanco-Pedernales Groundwater Conservation District, stand behind everything we do, offer financing when a larger repair is needed, and move fast when you have no water, with same-day emergency response whenever possible, because a dry tap is not something that should wait.

What we fix in Round Mountain

  • Lost or low water pressure traced to the pump, tank, or pressure switch.
  • No water at all fast diagnosis of the well, pump, and power.
  • Air sputtering at the taps often a dropping level or a leak on the line.
  • Dirty, cloudy, or smelly water we find the source instead of just filtering it.
  • Short-cycling or a pump that never stops usually a tank or switch problem, and fixable.
  • Failed or aging pumps repaired, or replaced when that is the smarter money.

No water right now? Our emergency service is the fast track, and we prioritize no-water calls. Planning a brand-new well instead? See water well drilling or your Round Mountain service area page.

Well repair in Round Mountain

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Licensed & insured · 4.6 / 84 reviews

Round Mountain well repair questions

Frequently asked

How deep are water wells around Round Mountain, and does that affect repairs?

Most wells in this part of northern Blanco County draw from the Middle and Lower Trinity Aquifer and commonly run several hundred feet or more. That depth puts steady strain on the pump and motor, so deep-set systems can show pressure loss and short-cycling sooner than shallow ones. We factor your well's actual depth and static level into every diagnosis before recommending a fix.

Should I repair my well or replace it?

In most cases a repair is far more affordable than drilling a new well, and a lot of problems trace back to a worn pump, a waterlogged pressure tank, or a failing switch rather than the well itself. We diagnose the whole system first, then tell you honestly which way is the smarter money. We will not push a replacement when a repair will do the job.

Why am I losing water pressure?

Low or lost pressure usually points to the pump, the pressure tank, or the pressure switch, and sometimes to a dropping water level during a dry stretch. On deeper Trinity wells around Round Mountain, drought-driven drawdown can pull the level below where the pump was set. We test each part of the system to find the real cause instead of just swapping components.

My faucets are sputtering air. What does that mean?

Air spitting at the taps often means the water level has dropped and the pump is starting to draw air, or there is a leak somewhere on the line or drop pipe. On the deeper wells and larger ranch tracts common here, that can follow a long dry spell pressing on Trinity water levels. It is worth checking promptly, since running a pump dry can damage it.

Do you serve Round Mountain and the surrounding area?

Yes. We repair and service wells throughout Round Mountain and across Blanco County, including nearby Johnson City and Marble Falls and the ranch country along US 281. We have worked these wells since 1985, and we prioritize no-water calls for same-day help when possible.

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Well trouble in Round Mountain?

Tell us what your well is doing and we will get on it, often the same day. Reach out for a free, honest assessment.