We live in rural North Central Ohio, and I'm not a DIYer. The 80-100yo pit well in our even-older house was lined with iron casing. The casing (from the top down) rusted through to a point where no plumber or well guy around here would even touch it (because of its disintegrating state). Pumped water just fine, crystal clear; but in the last couple of years the water was starting to smell metallic and orange up the shower a bit. Still drinkable (until then we had amazingly good water), but then started to impart a bad smell to clothes and dried everyone's skin. (Definitely NOT sulfur smell. Like having a mouthful of coins.) After talking to three different drillers around here, we decided to have a new well dug by a well-known local company. That was on 2 Oct 2023.
On 16 Oct, the second team came in and hooked it up, abandoning the old pit well with bentonite. The water from the new well is undrinkable, because of the extreme metallic odor and taste. You can't cook with it, for the same reason. Showers are no longer than a few minutes because of the horrible smell and drying skin. Dishwashing is unbearable, and we can't even drink out of the glasses for the residual smell from washing. Clothes washing has turned everything orange in just two months. It's definitely been getting worse by the day. Hot and cold both smell, but it's definitely worse when hot is added to the mix.
We had a sediment filter from before (wound string) which we now change every three days. No sediment in it, though. Just a VERY orange filter sitting there. When the water comes out of the faucets, it's clear. Leaving it sitting overnight does not change its appearance, and no solids appear. You only know it's orange water because of the toilets, washer tub, and shower tiles with their stains. No black of manganese, just orange. It's definitely getting worse by the week.
This is going to get too long, and I'm sorry to bother everyone. I've been reading through this forum (no, more like COMBING through it) for three months, now, and I've learned a lot. Thank you to everyone who takes the time to post here.
Well company who dug and hooked up to the pressure tank doesn't answer anymore. After a month of begging, they sent a man out to run a cheesy little test to send to Hellenbrand, but the well guy didn't send the required info to the company so no recommendations were made. 3.06 iron, 14 hardness, .08 manganese, 6.91 pH, 245 TDS. On 28 Nov, the well guy wrote "I'll get back to you later." Been crickets ever since, with no answer to my messages or courtesy call to find out if things got fixed.
So, I called our local plumber who sent a guy with the same test kit to send to Chandler (CSI). After three weeks, I got the test results from them. The plumbers are super nice people who have always done a good job for us. However, the test results must have been for someone else (CSI says it wasn't), with its .03 iron, .01 manganese, 7.46 pH, 351 TDS, and "no rust or odor" note. No tannins on either.
So, I've sent to National Testing Labs (after reading about them on this forum) and expect results the first week or January. Once I get that test back, I'll come back and start another thread. County water test for new wells showed no bacteria (after chlorine shocking by drillers).
Meanwhile, I wonder if any of you could look at the attached Well Log and see if there's anything obvious that could be contributing to our problem. I know it's a bit difficult without a good water test, but maybe there's something on here that will stand out. (Like, is it okay for the pump to be hanging in that type of ground two feet below the casing?) I watched the drillers and the second team who connected it all up the whole time they were here and asked a million questions, so please don't be afraid to ask a question about something that isn't listed on here. I'll do my best to answer. But please remember that I'm not a DIYer.
Thanks, in advance, for your time. I'm at wit's end here, and $300/month in bottled water for drinking alone is getting old fast. (Besides, we don't use plastic in our house, so it tastes pretty awful to us.) Oh, that reminds me. The 45' of pipe coming from the well to the pressure tank is copper. Like I said, we minimize plastic use around here.
Again, thanks for your time.
On 16 Oct, the second team came in and hooked it up, abandoning the old pit well with bentonite. The water from the new well is undrinkable, because of the extreme metallic odor and taste. You can't cook with it, for the same reason. Showers are no longer than a few minutes because of the horrible smell and drying skin. Dishwashing is unbearable, and we can't even drink out of the glasses for the residual smell from washing. Clothes washing has turned everything orange in just two months. It's definitely been getting worse by the day. Hot and cold both smell, but it's definitely worse when hot is added to the mix.
We had a sediment filter from before (wound string) which we now change every three days. No sediment in it, though. Just a VERY orange filter sitting there. When the water comes out of the faucets, it's clear. Leaving it sitting overnight does not change its appearance, and no solids appear. You only know it's orange water because of the toilets, washer tub, and shower tiles with their stains. No black of manganese, just orange. It's definitely getting worse by the week.
This is going to get too long, and I'm sorry to bother everyone. I've been reading through this forum (no, more like COMBING through it) for three months, now, and I've learned a lot. Thank you to everyone who takes the time to post here.
Well company who dug and hooked up to the pressure tank doesn't answer anymore. After a month of begging, they sent a man out to run a cheesy little test to send to Hellenbrand, but the well guy didn't send the required info to the company so no recommendations were made. 3.06 iron, 14 hardness, .08 manganese, 6.91 pH, 245 TDS. On 28 Nov, the well guy wrote "I'll get back to you later." Been crickets ever since, with no answer to my messages or courtesy call to find out if things got fixed.
So, I called our local plumber who sent a guy with the same test kit to send to Chandler (CSI). After three weeks, I got the test results from them. The plumbers are super nice people who have always done a good job for us. However, the test results must have been for someone else (CSI says it wasn't), with its .03 iron, .01 manganese, 7.46 pH, 351 TDS, and "no rust or odor" note. No tannins on either.
So, I've sent to National Testing Labs (after reading about them on this forum) and expect results the first week or January. Once I get that test back, I'll come back and start another thread. County water test for new wells showed no bacteria (after chlorine shocking by drillers).
Meanwhile, I wonder if any of you could look at the attached Well Log and see if there's anything obvious that could be contributing to our problem. I know it's a bit difficult without a good water test, but maybe there's something on here that will stand out. (Like, is it okay for the pump to be hanging in that type of ground two feet below the casing?) I watched the drillers and the second team who connected it all up the whole time they were here and asked a million questions, so please don't be afraid to ask a question about something that isn't listed on here. I'll do my best to answer. But please remember that I'm not a DIYer.
Thanks, in advance, for your time. I'm at wit's end here, and $300/month in bottled water for drinking alone is getting old fast. (Besides, we don't use plastic in our house, so it tastes pretty awful to us.) Oh, that reminds me. The 45' of pipe coming from the well to the pressure tank is copper. Like I said, we minimize plastic use around here.
Again, thanks for your time.