Not quite as mixed up as somewhat ignorant.
 I have only observations to go by as any info I've found on the subject
starts  at chlorine injection and ends with 'Pay me for chemicals and
equipment while you deal with chemicals in your water that are worse than
the bacteria'
 Thanks Dude!

 The majority of minerals in this area are red clay [iron], quartz and
chist [sedimentary]
 BTW, since dumping a gallon of CS into the well, the majority oof deposits
left over from boiling have changed from red to mostly white [calcium
probably] as it was before the rock quarry [granite] re-opened.
 I'm a little concerned about what's going on in the septic tank with all
that CS in the water.
 The change may have something to do with how cold it is lately too.

 Do you think that bubbling air through the water while it's in the well
will take the bacterium out of the cycle?  129 PSI is fairly easily do-able.

 The county, in it's wisdom, has decided over protestation that the jumbo
jet capable airport [for the 5 small airplanes in this, the smallest county
in the state], they built within the sphere of influence of RDU
International [so radar can't be used], on land previously owned by the
county officials, who also make up the local FAA committee, is to be
accompanied by a chlorine/flouride loaded county water system which we get
to pay for whether it gets used or not...already installed but not operable
for over a year.

 OH well, at least my property values [taxes] have gone up, as promised,
despite the increase in noise from having all 5 of those airplanes flying
around and around the 100 million dollar airport on Sundays while my old
sports car club gets to use the old airport to play on.

...and it's snowing AGAIN!
 jg [just gotta] LOL ;-)

Ode





At 10:12 AM 2/16/2004 -0500, you wrote:
>I think you are a little mixed up here.
>
>Iron is initially in the ground in the form of either metallic iron or iorn
>oxide, rust. If it is rust, then it stays put, it is already chemically at
ground
>level and is insoluble.
>
>If the water is sightly acidic, such as containing oxides of sulfur (that is
>having sulfuric and sulfurious acids), then the iron will react with the acid
>producting soluble forms of iron, such as iron sulfate.
>
>If there is any oxygen in the water then iron bacteria will oxidize the iron
>sulfate (or whatever compound of iron there is in the water) producing
iron oxide
>or rust.
>
>The batting will filter out the iron oxide and the bacteria.  The bateria are
>harmless to humans.  Only the Tin Man from Wizard of Oz would need to
worry about
>them.
>
>Now, the water I am talking about having iron has soluble iron that comes
in from
>the veins that way.  I believe what you are referring to is rust, which
can be
>easily filtered out Coyote.  That can be caused by iron bacteria eating
away at
>the well casing in the well, and yes, chlorine would quickly kill off
those and
>stop that for a while.
>
>One can create iron colonies of bacteria by keeping a piece of iron wet.
If you
>watch the way the rust grows it is identical to the way colonies of
bacteria and
>fungus will grow on a media. I noticed this when I was in school and
attempted a
>science fair project back when no one knew (or no one I knew) even knew
that such
>bacteria existed. Unfortunately I used penecillian to try to kill the
bacteria,
>and it didn't work, so I thought my theory was all wrong and dropped the
project.
>
>Marshall
>
>Ode Coyote wrote:
>
>>   I think the source of the iron is the iron bacterium.
>>  If the water is run trough the poyester filter, the bacterium, who like to
>> be attached to things..like the toilet bowl.., have a lot of surface area
>> to attach themselves to.
>>  Iron, once it oxidizes or in ore form is pretty stable and tends to stay
>> put, but the bacterium digest it into the water as evidenced by the fact
>> that shocking the well with chlorine keeps the water good for a
>> while..after the chlorine is gone.
>>  The bactrium are anaerobic, so sending all the well water into a spray to
>> oxygenate it should kill em off and the iron settle out. [Big settling
tank]
>>  Humm, maybe pumping compressed air into the well water to kill em off
>> 'before' they suck iron out of the rock?
>>  How many PSI to pump a stream of bubbles down through 300 ft of water? [a
>> lot, I'll bet]
>>  I only have to pump water up 30 ft..air, down 300 ft.
>>  I'm using a shallow well venturi type pump..maybe an air injecting venturi
>> would do it by oxygenating the return water.
>> Ode
>>
>> At 09:40 AM 2/15/2004 -0500, you wrote:
>> >Go to a fabric store and buy a couple yards of 50/50 cotton polyester
quilt
>> >batting to filter out the iron. I made a filter with 2 5 gallon buckets
that
>> >were drilled and used the fabric between them . It removed almost all the
>> >iron. I changed the fabric out  once a month on my well.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >TJ Garland, CMO supplier
>> >           there are no incurable illnesses-only incurable people.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >>From: Wayne Fugitt <[email protected]>
>> >>Reply-To: [email protected]
>> >>To: [email protected]
>> >>Subject: Re: CS>Water filter?
>> >>Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 20:23:03 -0600
>> >>
>> >>Evening Marjie,
>> >>
>> >> >> thinking of getting me some leeches and let them dine on my toes.
>> >>
>> >>       You could consider making blood donations from time to time.  I
>> >>really hate to do it because I have spent so much effort and so much
money
>> >>over the years trying to make it high quality.   Still, I never feel
it at
>> >>all when I do it.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>If the problem is iron algae or bacteria you're talking thousands for
>> >>>>complete whole house treatment.
>> >>>>Some of my neighbors have the problem so bad the water is brown as
>> >>>>mud..mine isn't that bad but has a distict flavor and stains everything
>> >>>>eventually.
>> >>
>> >>    We has a similar situation at my hunting camp.  A very deep well, 8
>> >>inch casing, and a 3 HP pump submerged in the well.
>> >>
>> >>    The filter selected cost about $ 1500.  It does a good job, with
>> >>automatic back flushing, and chemical injectors.    The water has no
smell,
>> >>no brown color and tastes half decent.
>> >>
>> >>   I don't drink it but the others do.  I carry my own water everywhere I
>> >>go.
>> >>
>> >>   I was surprised what  a good job it does.  I did not select the filter
>> >>nor did I help with the installation due to other obligations at the
time.
>> >>
>> >>   Wayne
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>--
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