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cln cln is offline
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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my house?

How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)

If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?

If I do shock the well I intend to install a new hot water tank at the
same time and a new water pressure tank. (I'd shock then add the
filters and tanks)

When can I wash my whites again? :P

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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbingfrom my house?

cln wrote:
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)

If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?

....

Anything _in_ the current system would have to be flushed to remove it.

_NO_ filter is 100%, but you can go to 10 micron, or even 5. Depends on
what the sediment is as to how fine it might actually be.

There should, of course, be a sand filter on the foot of the well. Is
this a new problem or existing? Jet or submergible pump? Too many
other unknowns.

"Shocking" a well will make no difference at all on sediment.

--
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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my house?


"cln" wrote in message
ups.com...
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)

If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?

If I do shock the well I intend to install a new hot water tank at the
same time and a new water pressure tank. (I'd shock then add the
filters and tanks)

When can I wash my whites again? :P



Depends on the sediment. A whole house filter, or two of them in line (10
micron followed by a 5 or 2 micron) will get most of the sediment. Rust and
iron can be very fine and still get through. Since you mention whites,
chances are, dissolved solids that a filter will not trap may be the cause
of your problem.

One way to find out is to have the water tested by a local reputable water
treatment specialist. I'd not call the Culligan man that is mainly
interested in selling you his product.

Sediment that is trapped in the piping already will eventually come out, but
is probably not a big deal if you trap the new stuff.
Ed


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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my house?

On Oct 29, 11:02 am, dpb wrote:
cln wrote:
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)


If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?


...

Anything _in_ the current system would have to be flushed to remove it.

_NO_ filter is 100%, but you can go to 10 micron, or even 5. Depends on
what the sediment is as to how fine it might actually be.

There should, of course, be a sand filter on the foot of the well. Is
this a new problem or existing? Jet or submergible pump? Too many
other unknowns.

"Shocking" a well will make no difference at all on sediment.

--


It's an existing problem. I assumed that 100% would be impossible.
There is a pump inside the house but wires going into the well so I
assume there is _also_ a submergible pump. (Is that even possible?)

How do you 'flush' the system? Just running the water constantly for a
day? What is the maintenance on a sand filter?

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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbingfrom my house?

cln wrote:
On Oct 29, 11:02 am, dpb wrote:
cln wrote:
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)
If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?

...

Anything _in_ the current system would have to be flushed to remove it.

_NO_ filter is 100%, but you can go to 10 micron, or even 5. Depends on
what the sediment is as to how fine it might actually be.

There should, of course, be a sand filter on the foot of the well. Is
this a new problem or existing? Jet or submergible pump? Too many
other unknowns.

"Shocking" a well will make no difference at all on sediment.

--


It's an existing problem. I assumed that 100% would be impossible.
There is a pump inside the house but wires going into the well so I
assume there is _also_ a submergible pump. (Is that even possible?)

How do you 'flush' the system? Just running the water constantly for a
day? What is the maintenance on a sand filter?


The inside pump is undoubtedly just your pressure pump. If you don't
even know what you have, I would suggest you need to find that out first
-- it could be a problem at the well foot w/ bad casing, pump set too
low, etc., that is the prime cause.

You don't say anything about what the sediment actually is or how much.
If it's obvious amounts of sand/mud, there's a real problem; if it's
simply longterm things get discolored, that's something else.

Edwind suggests a water sample and test; that's always a good idea just
on general principles, but if there is visible sand and/or mud, the
problems are more in depth than just mineral deposits...

Depends again on what you have and where it is trapped as to what would
take to flush a system, but the general idea is as you suggest.
Possibly compressed air as well to blow the lines if significant.
Again, too little information of actual situation for anything other
than generalities.

Inline filters simply replace cartridges periodically -- foot sand
filters are simply fine-mesh screens and need no maintenance in general
unless were to clog (in which case your water output goes down) or to
develop a hole (in which case it needs replacing). If you're getting
observable quantities of sand gritty enough it will settle out in a
quart jar, that's indicative of a well problem...

--


--




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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my house?

I find that when I work on the plumbing and have to drain the lines, the air
bubbles that are created by the air in the line tend to scour anything loose
inside the pipes and instantly clog the aerator, or if I thought to remove
it, the water comes out dirty for a second or two.

"cln" wrote in message
ps.com...
On Oct 29, 11:02 am, dpb wrote:
cln wrote:
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)


If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?


...

Anything _in_ the current system would have to be flushed to remove it.

_NO_ filter is 100%, but you can go to 10 micron, or even 5. Depends on
what the sediment is as to how fine it might actually be.

There should, of course, be a sand filter on the foot of the well. Is
this a new problem or existing? Jet or submergible pump? Too many
other unknowns.

"Shocking" a well will make no difference at all on sediment.

--


It's an existing problem. I assumed that 100% would be impossible.
There is a pump inside the house but wires going into the well so I
assume there is _also_ a submergible pump. (Is that even possible?)

How do you 'flush' the system? Just running the water constantly for a
day? What is the maintenance on a sand filter?



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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbingfrom my house?



On Mon, 29 Oct 2007, cln wrote:

How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)

If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?



You need a spin down sediment filter to get rid of larger sediment before
any finer filtration.

John
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Default How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my house?

On Oct 30, 9:30 am, John van Gurp wrote:
On Mon, 29 Oct 2007, cln wrote:
How would I get rid of all of the sediments from the plumbing from my
house? (yes, I'm on a well)


If I install a filter on the water supply will stop it from coming in
100%? What about the leftover sediments in the system currently?
Would shocking the well and system be enough to take care of this
issue?


You need a spin down sediment filter to get rid of larger sediment before
any finer filtration.

John


I went to HD yesterday and got a Household Filtration Unit by GE
http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/s...k=P_PartNumber
I couldn't find the exact model I got but you'll get the idea.

I'm looking if it said 'spin down' but since it was one of only 2
household filters they had, I figured it was my best bet.

They had many other choices but most of them were just under drinking
water/under counter installation.
The other household filters were (a) the same I had minus the bypass,
(b) same I had minus parts like compression fittings and filter, (c)
mine, bypass valve compression fittings, filter... finally (d) high
flow or high volume filter system which i found odd that the filters
that would fit in it only went down to 30 microns (minimum) compared
to my model that can take filter with capacity of 5 microns.

Thanks all, I'll start with this and let the system clean itself for a
while, then later I'll add onto the system the water softener that I
desperately need. I'll make sure I add the right number of ball valves
so when I come to add other items to the main line that I won't be
stuck draining the whole system for nothing.
I'll shock the well later, I know it won't solve the issue of
sediments but at least disinfect and maybe clean the pipes.

Thanks again, cln

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