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    BGorm's Avatar
    BGorm Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
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    #1

    May 18, 2008, 06:53 AM
    Well Water Odor
    Hello

    I was at my cabin this weekend and my well water has a odor to it.. like rotten eggs.. we put in a new hot water heater it about 2 months ago and have not a problem.. But now it smells . I did see about changing out the anode rod in the heater.. is that hard to do ? What could be the source of the problem and what solutions can we do.. Thank You.. Brian
    tickle's Avatar
    tickle Posts: 23,796, Reputation: 2674
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    #2

    May 18, 2008, 06:56 AM
    If you have a private well and the water smells musty or like "rotten eggs," you may have a bacteria problem. Bacteria that cause this smell live in the soil or aquifer. They are not a health risk. However, once introduced to a well, they may multiply rapidly and cause odor problems.

    Sometimes odor-producing bacteria indicate that disease-causing bacteria are also present. This is especially true if there has been a sudden change in water quality. Have your well water tested through a certified lab to make sure there is not a health problem. Tests usually identify potential health problems but may not detect odor-causing bacteria. The lab lets you know if water is safe to drink. If it is safe but smells bad, you can reduce or eliminate the odor.

    Odor-producing bacteria are often referred to as "iron" or "sulfur-reducing" bacteria. They use iron or sulfur in their life cycle and give off hydrogen sulfide gas. That's the rotten egg odor. The bacteria may form slimy colonies in pipes or toilet tanks and can stain laundry. However, the odor is usually the most objectionable problem.

    Iron bacteria can get into wells when maintenance is done on piping, well casing, or pumps. Bacteria can get in when work is done on indoor plumbing, or when a hot water heater is installed. Finally, they may get into water supplies through a direct connection to surface water or shallow groundwater seepage.

    Once established in your well or water supply, bacteria can be very hard to eliminate. After work is done on your well or plumbing, thoroughly disinfect the system. This kills bacteria that enter the water before they get a foothold. If there is a connection to surface water or bacteria are strongly established, repeated disinfection may be necessary. Disinfection eliminates or reduces bacteria to tolerable levels.

    Shock chlorination is the most common way to disinfect a well. You need to calculate carefully how much chlorine is appropriate for your well size and depth. Make sure the entire system gets disinfected and that chlorine remains in the system 6 to 8 hours
    BGorm's Avatar
    BGorm Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
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    #3

    Jun 1, 2008, 10:54 AM
    I removed my anode rod.. and it was aluminum and it SMELLED to high heaven.. I am going to replace the rod with a zinc rod.. set me back a few bucks.. 44.00.. But it worth it if it saves my water heater. Anyone know of a place to get this rod cheaper ?


    Thanks

    BGorm

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