mbmarsh
Computer
- Apr 9, 2008
- 12
I've got a good well, 125 feet, refill 25 gpm, 85 feet of water; had the water analyzed several times, there's about nothing in it--very soft, slightly acid, small amount of iron (0.1 ppm). Had a new pump put in five years ago, soon after I moved into this now-18-year old house.
But about six months ago, I started getting discoloration in the water--very noticeable. Before that, there had been no trace of it. I hired a plumber who installed a Big Blue 10 inch filter. With a 30 micron filter, that helped a lot, but not enough; subsequently I went to a 1 micron pleated cellulose filter. Again, a big reduction; but the water, sometimes, is still hazy, and if allowed to stand will deposit a "scum" on the bottom of a glass. When I change filters, the housing contains a lot of orange "mud." So I installed a 0.5 micron String Wound PolyPropylene Filter; still the same problem.
So I called out the company that installed the pump. The specialist looked at my used, orange, filter, took a running water sample directly from the pump head (1 ppm iron, he said), and told me I had lots of bacteria living down in my well (my analysis had said "no iron bacteria") and prescribed a metering apparatus to sit atop the pump and inject a dissolved pellet of chlorine/bromine every morning at 2 AM, to kill the bacteria. He is so sure that this will do the job that he guarantees it--my money back. But that's the rub--it's a LOT of money.
There was mention of shocking the system--essentially pouring Clorox down the well; I read up on it, and it sounds like something I could readily do. While I was waiting for a weekend with time to do this, I investigated the nature of the orange mud. I took a sample from the used filter; I also took a sample scraped from the wall of my toilet tank reservoir. I treated both with fairly strong muriatic acid; overnight, both dissolved entirely. This suggests to me that it's nothing but "rust."
Now, where is it coming from? Best I know, there is no galvanized pipe in the system, so that's probably not the source. Is it in the well, in the ferrous (water-soluble) form? If so, were I to take a sample directly at the well head, it should be colorless and clear; then if allowed to stand open to the air, a precipitate should form as the ferrous is oxidized to ferric oxides. I'll do that soon as I can.
That's step one. Next step would be to shock chlorinate. That should do two things: Kill all the iron bacteria down there, if there are any; and oxidize all the ferrous iron to ferric iron, and precipitate it in the well, to be flushed out when I flush out the chlorine. Next, I wait. If there is no iron bacteria in the well, then this treatment should have almost no effect, since as soon as the water in the well is replenished from the aquifer, I'll have ferrous iron back in the system, and it will go back to falling out in my pressure tank and collecting on my pleated filter.
BUT, if there _is_ iron bacteria in the tank, this chlorination should remove it, and it should be weeks or even months, before it reappears--and so for that period, I should see no precipitate.
OK, so that's great theory; does it make sense to folks who know what they're talking about? Thanks for your expertise.
But about six months ago, I started getting discoloration in the water--very noticeable. Before that, there had been no trace of it. I hired a plumber who installed a Big Blue 10 inch filter. With a 30 micron filter, that helped a lot, but not enough; subsequently I went to a 1 micron pleated cellulose filter. Again, a big reduction; but the water, sometimes, is still hazy, and if allowed to stand will deposit a "scum" on the bottom of a glass. When I change filters, the housing contains a lot of orange "mud." So I installed a 0.5 micron String Wound PolyPropylene Filter; still the same problem.
So I called out the company that installed the pump. The specialist looked at my used, orange, filter, took a running water sample directly from the pump head (1 ppm iron, he said), and told me I had lots of bacteria living down in my well (my analysis had said "no iron bacteria") and prescribed a metering apparatus to sit atop the pump and inject a dissolved pellet of chlorine/bromine every morning at 2 AM, to kill the bacteria. He is so sure that this will do the job that he guarantees it--my money back. But that's the rub--it's a LOT of money.
There was mention of shocking the system--essentially pouring Clorox down the well; I read up on it, and it sounds like something I could readily do. While I was waiting for a weekend with time to do this, I investigated the nature of the orange mud. I took a sample from the used filter; I also took a sample scraped from the wall of my toilet tank reservoir. I treated both with fairly strong muriatic acid; overnight, both dissolved entirely. This suggests to me that it's nothing but "rust."
Now, where is it coming from? Best I know, there is no galvanized pipe in the system, so that's probably not the source. Is it in the well, in the ferrous (water-soluble) form? If so, were I to take a sample directly at the well head, it should be colorless and clear; then if allowed to stand open to the air, a precipitate should form as the ferrous is oxidized to ferric oxides. I'll do that soon as I can.
That's step one. Next step would be to shock chlorinate. That should do two things: Kill all the iron bacteria down there, if there are any; and oxidize all the ferrous iron to ferric iron, and precipitate it in the well, to be flushed out when I flush out the chlorine. Next, I wait. If there is no iron bacteria in the well, then this treatment should have almost no effect, since as soon as the water in the well is replenished from the aquifer, I'll have ferrous iron back in the system, and it will go back to falling out in my pressure tank and collecting on my pleated filter.
BUT, if there _is_ iron bacteria in the tank, this chlorination should remove it, and it should be weeks or even months, before it reappears--and so for that period, I should see no precipitate.
OK, so that's great theory; does it make sense to folks who know what they're talking about? Thanks for your expertise.