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#1 |
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hurtlocker
Trade: homebuilder remodeler carpenter
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: minnesota
Posts: 488
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Iron In Well Water
I am putting up a structure
I dug the well and there is a lot of iron my question is If they want to irrigate and not turn every thing orange what would the easiest way to filter or pull that iron out |
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#2 |
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Pro
Trade: Home Remodeling
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,362
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Re: Iron In Well Water
1. Hire cheap Mexico illegals to filter out iron.
2. Sell that iron pieces to China.
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#3 |
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solar guy
Trade: solar contracting
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Annapolis Md
Posts: 1,883
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Re: Iron In Well Water
define a lot of iron in terms of ppm
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#4 |
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hurtlocker
Trade: homebuilder remodeler carpenter
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: minnesota
Posts: 488
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Re: Iron In Well Water
not sure i have not had it tested yet
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#5 |
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Certified Remodeler
Trade: Kitchen bath remodeler
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: North Oaks,MN
Posts: 3,207
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Re: Iron In Well Water
I have high iron, water smell like sulphur and it tastes like a hubcap off a 57 Chevy (never actually tried this).
I am considering a reverse osmosis filter just to make coffee and have drinking water. Filter is about $200, or you can get a sand filter in line. Lots you can try. Forget the water softener guys unless your friends with one.
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#6 | |
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Pompass Ass
Trade: Certified Building and Certified A/C Contractor
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Plant City, Florida
Posts: 2,090
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Re: Iron In Well WaterQuote:
They aren't perfect but work pretty well depending on the iron content in the water. You could also run the water through a water treatment system, but a RO system would be overkill and very expensive for irrigation purposes, plus the RO water may not be good for the lawn. |
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#7 |
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Certified Remodeler
Trade: Kitchen bath remodeler
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: North Oaks,MN
Posts: 3,207
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Re: Iron In Well Water
Nailkiller, try the University of Minnesota website for water questions and answers.
http://wrc.umn.edu/ I went their to find out about septic systems as I now have my first home ever that uses a septic system. I went before I installed my water softener.
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#8 |
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Proud Plumber
Trade: Plumbing/Building Contractor
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Southwest Florida
Posts: 144
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Re: Iron In Well Water
Careful which filter you select should you choose to go that route. Irrigation systems can burn up a filter life quickly. Sometimes injection of chemical treatment is the better way to go, but you won't know until it is tested and you know the ppm of the iron.
I have a high sulfur content in my water at home as well, and yes it does taste absolutely awful. Even off of R.O. it just never taste that great. I had my own water tested and a softener made for my water conditions. It knocked out most of the nasty and made it bearable. Iron is nasty the damage it can do to a driveway or exterior wall is a major PIA.
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Bill "I'd rather die while I'm living then live while I'm dead".... Jimmy Buffett |
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#9 |
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The Grand Wazoo
Trade: It blowed up real good!
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Illinois
Posts: 3,089
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Re: Iron In Well Water
I have a lot of friends that live in the iron range, all of them have an iron bottle of some sort or another.
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A flush is better than a full house. |
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#10 |
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Pro
Trade: Residential Contractor
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Jensen Beach, FL
Posts: 10,475
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Re: Iron In Well Water
I have the same problem here (iron/sulphur). The easiest way is to configure the system to where water doesn't hit anything. I used low level emmitters around the perimeter of structures and inside planting beds, the bigger adjustable heads outside of that for medium areas and gear heads for the wide open spaces. We get a lot of wind so the RustAid is used about once a year.
There are other ways to include a full blown water treatment system and the injection system which will require 2 pumps if you intend to use the well for other purposes. All of the "injection" systems that I have found are really suction systems with the feeder line going to the pump suction line.
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You can't solve you're problems with the same level of thinking that created the problems. Albert Einstein |
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#11 |
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ampman
Trade: providing pathways for electrons and protons
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: central florida
Posts: 778
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Re: Iron In Well Water
my well has alot of iron, we went with a bleach injector to a contact tank then filters out bleach then water softner -- best water we ever had
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an army of sheep lead by a lion will defeat an army of lions lead by a sheep |
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#12 |
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Certified Remodeler
Trade: Kitchen bath remodeler
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: North Oaks,MN
Posts: 3,207
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Re: Iron In Well Water
But does it make good coffee?
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#13 |
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Structural Engineer
Trade: Mechanical, Structural
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 513
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Re: Iron In Well Water
I have clients with private wells here in NJ (if it's not a house, they call it a public non-transient water supply, and they are regulated), and I do parts of the DEP BSDW reports for their relicensing. I see Birm iron filters in the places I go. In fact that's pretty much the only brand I see. I can't attest one way or the other, but that's what I see.
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#14 |
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Certified Remodeler
Trade: Kitchen bath remodeler
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: North Oaks,MN
Posts: 3,207
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Re: Iron In Well Water
Birm does not work if their is a "Rotten egg" smell. Not recommended for over 10 ppm.
Greensand filters are suggested then.
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#15 |
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Proud Plumber
Trade: Plumbing/Building Contractor
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Southwest Florida
Posts: 144
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Re: Iron In Well Water
If your question is referring to chlorine injection, the answer is NO. Strictly my own experience and taste. It would be like putting peanut butter on your hub cap. Either way the taste still exist. We use R.O. at the sink for coffee.
Strictly my own experience.
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Bill "I'd rather die while I'm living then live while I'm dead".... Jimmy Buffett |
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#16 |
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Certified Remodeler
Trade: Kitchen bath remodeler
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: North Oaks,MN
Posts: 3,207
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Re: Iron In Well Water
After reading a lot on this, including the experts who offer very different opinions, my take is this.
Get a water softener for bathing and laundry, right from the well for outdoor stuff and reverse osmosis for drinking.
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#17 |
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Smart phone? Scan me!
Trade: Painting/Framing/Drywall
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: tWiliGht zOne
Posts: 2,118
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Re: Iron In Well Water![]() "It puts the filter in the well" |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to nEighter For This Useful Post: | BobsLandscaping (07-10-2009) |
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#18 |
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Jeff
Trade: master turd burglar
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Bradford PA
Posts: 1,109
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Re: Iron In Well Water
Wow for some reason and im not sure why i would of never thought of well water in florida having alot of iron. I kind of always thought that was a northern states type of thing. With the big boom in oil drilling around here everyones having a big problem with iron, manganese and methane in their wells. Couple ppl can light it coming out of the faucet, good times right there.
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#19 |
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Pro
Trade: Landscaping
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Genesee, ID
Posts: 846
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Re: Iron In Well Water
On the Polar Sea we had 2 evaps that turned salt water into fresh water. The system was designed so that you could suck raw sewage into it and have clean, safe water. It used steam from the boilers to heat the water in a vacuum, water in a vacuum boils at around 112 degrees. Uses less energy than boiling in atmosphere. The steam that came off the boiling water ran through a condenser where it was cooled and then into a pair of 10,000 gallon holding tanks. Worked great. The reverse osmosis system was constantly requiring maintenance, filter changes, and cleaning. The evap required no real maintenance, just check the pressure and temps periodically.
If you could build an evap you could store large quantities of water in holding tanks, then you wouldn't have to run your boiler all the time. The evaps on the Polar Sea produced around 300 gallons of water per hour each. Real efficient machines. The boilers that powered them (and heated the living spaces) burned around 75 gallons per hour diesel. We had two of those as well, but could run both evaps off of one boiler. |
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