Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment?

   / Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment? #11  
Mom has heavy iron in her water. The water filter has an air injection system and periodic back flush. No chemicals to add (other than air). It works very well.

Also, talk to the neighbors and see what their water is like. None of the neighbors around my parents had iron problems. The well was pretty shallow. Hitting water around 20 feet, and down a bit more for added depth. Some casing. Anyway, they left the very rusty well behind the house for barn water, and drilled a second well in front of the house that had much less iron (but wasn't iron free, thus the filter).
 
   / Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment? #12  
I have a spring that supplies water to the house. I get "late summer" smells. I initially thought of some form of treatment. But with early fall - the fresh, clean water returns. It's been this way for the 42 years that I've used the spring.

I've had this water tested. Bacterially it's fine. During the late summer it's high in iron and associated odors.

For a month or so of "country water" I'm not about to add the complexities of high technology.

I put a large pitcher of water in the frige and after a day - all the odors are gone. This is only required during the month or so in the late summer.

Besides - the little green frogs that are resident in the spring don't seem to mind these late summer smells at all.
 
   / Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment? #13  
The stink is hydrogen sulfide from the sulfur (sulfates) in your water that gets worse when the oxygen in the water is depleted, typically by microbes, but also by heating in a hot water heater. Iron will give you stains that range from yellow to red to black.

Both will be reduced if you have a way to inject an oxidizers (air/oxygen or ozone, chlorine, peroxide, or permangante) into the water. There are water softener like units that inject air, and allow enough contact time to precipitate the iron in the unit, and then backwash out the rust periodically. Your water softener will have a longer life if you have a an ozone, peroxide, or permanganate pretreatment, but in any case your salt should be either "Iron-out" salt, or have some added citric acid to get the iron off of your softener resin so it does not lose effectiveness.

I would start by getting your well water analyzed first, so you have data to work with to size your equipment.

We pump our water into holding tanks to let the oxygen in the air time to react and precipitate the iron. It is pretty low maintenance, if you have a suitable site.

If it were me, I would go with one of the iron out filtration units, though I might try to run it on ozone to ensure that as much as possible sulfur and iron are removed.

All the best,

Peter
Water treatment is the “snake oil” for today’s times. Find a lab that can test for IRB content in the water. Then see if peroxide or chlorine will remove the contaminants.
 
   / Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment? #14  
Been using H202 for years now. I buy mine in 15 gallon carboys of 35% and reduce it down to around 10% with the addition of distilled water and use a 'Pulsa-Feeder' positive displacement injection pump to inject the solution into the raw water at the bladder tank, then it goes through a Cuno industrial filter housing with a 10 micron filter cartridge inside, By the time it gets to the filter, the H202 has precipitated out the sulfur dioxide and turned it into a solid which the filter strips out.

Nice thing about H202 is it kills any and all bacteria present in the well water. Had my water tested many times by the county and it always comes back negative for bacteria content.

I also control the injection rate with a Dayton 6X602N timed delay switch that I can adjust for injection pump on cycle time that activates when the well pump is energized.

Your mileage may be different than mine but what I use works for me and has for at least 15 years now.
 
   / Peroxide or Chlorine for well water treatment? #15  
Most county (state) do not test for water quality but only test To “safe” drinking water standards. Typically looking for unacceptable levels of e.coli, coliforms, lead, nitrates and pH.
To really find out what may be “wrong” with water, you need a decent microbiology lab. Once the problem is properly diagnosed, a cure can be found.
 

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