If you’re speccing a 3in submersible well pump, you’ve probably run into two headaches: tight boreholes and inconsistent water quality. The 135QJ Deep Well Submersible Pump, from Hebei (No. 6 Xingyuan Road, West District, Lincheng Economic Development Zone), is one of those slimline units that quietly solves both. To be honest, it’s not flashy—just durable, efficient, and easier to customize than most.
We’re seeing a shift toward energy-optimized hydraulics, VFD-ready motors, and anti-sand intake designs—especially in 3-inch footprints for retrofit wells. Installers tell me they want fewer callbacks: long-life bearings, proper thrust handling, cable options that don’t crack after one season. The 135QJ lines up with that, plus OEM flexibility, which—surprisingly—many brands still resist.
Originating from a manufacturer that undertakes OEM builds, the 135QJ supports non‑standard motors/pumps per user drawings. It implements GB/T2816-2014 (well submersible pump) and GB/T2818-2014 (well submersible asynchronous motor). In field notes, I’ve seen steady performance in sandier aquifers and low-amp starts when paired with a decent VFD.
| Spec (≈ real-world) | 135QJ Deep Well Submersible Pump |
|---|---|
| Nominal diameter | 3 in slimline (≈ 75 mm) |
| Flow range | 1.0–5.0 m³/h (≈ 4–22 gpm) |
| Head range | 30–140 m, multi-stage |
| Motor power | 0.37–2.2 kW (single/three-phase) |
| Voltage | 220V/1ph or 380–460V/3ph (VFD-ready) |
| Materials | SS304 wet end; optional SS316/Noryl stages |
| Protection | IP68, Class F insulation, S1 duty |
| Sand tolerance | ≤ 0.25% by volume (typical) |
| Efficiency | Up to ≈ 52% hydraulic; total system varies |
Pump stages are dynamically balanced; shafts are SS; thrust bearings sized for multi-stage axial loads. Stators are epoxy-potted; windings pass hipot and surge tests. Hydraulic performance is tested per ISO 9906 (Grade 2B typical). With clean water and proper sizing, service life often reaches 8–10 years—longer with SS316 and good filtration, shorter in abrasive wells (that’s reality).
Standards implemented: GB/T2816-2014 and GB/T2818-2014. CE and RoHS documentation are available for many builds; ask during OEM spec.
On a 92 m head orchard install, the unit delivered 3.2 m³/h at 6.1 A (380V/3ph), within ±4% of the pump curve. Noise topside was basically the contactor clicking—submersibles are quiet. Many customers say the recovery after cycling is smooth, probably thanks to the thrust stack design.
| Vendor | Warranty | Certs | Lead time | Customization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 135QJ manufacturer | 12–18 mo (region-dependent) | GB/T, ISO 9906 test report, CE on request | ≈ 10–25 days | High (OEM, materials, branding) |
| Generic Brand A | 12 mo | Basic CE | 3–6 weeks | Low–Medium |
| Generic Brand B | 24 mo | CE, limited test data | 2–8 weeks | Medium |
A vineyard retrofit used a 3in submersible well pump to avoid re-drilling. The 135QJ at ~120 m head fed two zones via drip, cutting energy use ≈ 11% after switching to a VFD and trimming setpoints. No sand-lock after a dry season—filters plus the intake screen did their job.
Bottom line: if you need a durable, narrow-diameter unit with real OEM support, the 135QJ is a smart shortlist item. And yes, you can get it built around local voltages and your exact cable spec. For narrow bores, a 3in submersible well pump like this is just… sensible.