โDec-17-2015 06:54 AM
โDec-29-2015 05:44 AM
โDec-28-2015 03:27 PM
Deb and Ed M wrote:Chuck_thehammer wrote:
I know and understand "Water" is millions of years old...
but what lives in water, or grows in water...
my reason... I am Healthy for 63 (No Med's).. but my wife is another story.. and she gets ill easily . and she takes about 10 pills a day..
I was a "Water Technician" (owned a pool/spa store) and your thinking is correct: stuff DOES grow in wet or damp locations. The most common bacteria is called pseudomonas: a bunch of it will make water smell "swampy", and if you run your finger on the inside of a water line, it will feel slimy. That's because pseudomonas secretes a slime layer to protect itself from dry periods and invasions, like chlorine ๐ It's why you should let the hose run briefly before using it to fill the freshwater tank - it will blow out any un-attached pseudomonas.
Even if you sanitize your tanks with chlorine, it's doubtful you'll ever kill everything growing inside the plumbing. While ingesting some bacteria won't bother most people - in the case of your wife's more fragile health - I would recommend using bottled, purified water for drinking. Go ahead and shower and cook with fresh-smelling tank water. Try to fill the freshwater tank with city (chlorinated) water when you can; or add a freshwater additive to well water. Bleach isn't always a good sanitizer because it has a very short shelf-life.
โDec-28-2015 02:21 AM
โDec-27-2015 10:54 AM
TenOC wrote:
By the way, water does not get "old". All the water in the world is millions of years old. There is no such thing as "new" water.
โDec-24-2015 04:20 PM
โDec-24-2015 06:08 AM
Chuck_thehammer wrote:
I know and understand "Water" is millions of years old...
but what lives in water, or grows in water...
my reason... I am Healthy for 63 (No Med's).. but my wife is another story.. and she gets ill easily . and she takes about 10 pills a day..
โDec-23-2015 06:56 PM
Okie1 wrote:
You could not be more wrong, just take a tour of your local water treatment plant to see what it really takes.Lynnmor wrote:
You can convert well water into city water by adding about a tablespoon of bleach.
โDec-23-2015 06:21 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
You can convert well water into city water by adding about a tablespoon of bleach.
โDec-18-2015 08:16 PM
โDec-18-2015 03:15 PM
โDec-18-2015 03:15 PM
BillyW wrote:
I typically leave (city) water in for fairly long periods, up to a month or so, but I've learned the hard way that the water heater must be drained when not in use for more than about a week, or else the dreaded rotten egg smell sets in, requiring extensive cleaning.
โDec-18-2015 02:08 PM
โDec-18-2015 05:07 AM
โDec-18-2015 04:50 AM