View Single Post
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
Sumgod[_2_] Sumgod[_2_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10
Default Well Water, Pentek Filters & Iron Oxide


"Onetap" wrote in message
...
On 11 Feb, 14:58, "Sumgod" wrote:

Situation: Water supply comes from a well (old brick 'tank' approx two
metres deep and one and a half across built over a spring).


Built over a spring? Are you certain or is it belief acquired with the
house?

The reason I ask is that this sounds like a brick cistern. They were
built to collect rain water from the house gutters and paved yards.
It's usable 'grey' water, but not suitable for drinking. You could
check by putting food colouring, or drain tracing dye in the gutters.
I've never heard of a cistern built on a spring, but I'm not Dr.
Drivel so don't claim to know everything.

You could consider a sand filter, it would take the coarse particles
out and prolong the life of cartridge filter. They are similar to
water softeners (i.e., they are water softeners) , but filled with a
suitable sand and not resin. The control valve backflushes it at
intervals and flushes the debris to drain. There are other types used
in swimming pools and aquaria. I seem to recall that green sand was
the filter media to remove iron salts.

There's lots of info on the internet from the USA. There are lots of
rural wells in use out there.


Thanks Onetap! I'll check out sand filters.

Brick tank is built over a spring. I drained it once (bucket and rope) in
order to make sure it was 'clean' at the bottom. It was. Just a rocky bottom
from which the water seeped out.

The 'well' itself is approx 50 meters from the house. The house or at least
parts of it are 500yrs old. I suspect the presence of the spring may well
account for the house being here in the first place.