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Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 12 Aug 2018, 06:43
by Wendyf
It's fine thanks Stanley but we haven't got the treatment plant installed yet, that is due to arrive on Tuesday. We got two quotes for it and they differed by a huge amount, not only in the type and cost of the equipment but also in the levels of iron and manganese present. One came in at £1600 and the other at nearly £4000, very suspicious! Needless to say we are going with the cheaper option and got the council to come and test the water as well.
Colin has almost got his drainage trenches filled in.....much harder than digging them out!

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 13 Aug 2018, 02:24
by Stanley
Was the analysis good? Give Col my best........

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 13 Aug 2018, 12:14
by chinatyke
Wendyf wrote: 12 Aug 2018, 06:43 ... but also in the levels of iron and manganese present.
Manganese or magnesium?

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 13 Aug 2018, 13:30
by Wendyf
chinatyke wrote: 13 Aug 2018, 12:14
Wendyf wrote: 12 Aug 2018, 06:43 ... but also in the levels of iron and manganese present.
Manganese or magnesium?
Manganese.

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 13 Aug 2018, 13:49
by chinatyke
Thanks.

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 14 Aug 2018, 02:51
by Stanley
That's interesting. At one time there was a persuasive theory that lower than usual trace levels of manganese was a precursor to BSE. There was very little in this area.......

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 14 Aug 2018, 08:24
by plaques
For a totally different reason I was looking at the differences between distilled and deionized water. This link may be of interest as a bit of background knowledge. Link.

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 14 Aug 2018, 08:46
by Wendyf
We are having a BIRM filtration system installed. No chemicals to replace but it does require a regular backwash to flush the deposited iron particles out of the filter. This is why Col has been digging a new drain. I don't think the manganese is a danger to humans, just the pipework!

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 14 Aug 2018, 17:20
by Wendyf
All sorted this morning.

Image

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 15 Aug 2018, 03:26
by Stanley
Looks very good Wendy and you now have a reliable and independent water supply. I can't really think of a better investment! (Now for the swimming pool........)

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 15 Aug 2018, 07:58
by Bodger
Not sure of your location of the filtration system, but frost can be an expensive , i used insulation and a thermostat controlled heater with heater tape on external pipe runs

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 15 Aug 2018, 14:43
by Wendyf
Frost shouldn't be a problem Bodger, there is insulation between the chipboard and the stone wall and Col has plans to form a cupboard round it. All pipework is plastic until it goes into the house. Fingers crossed it will be OK!

Re: Borehole at Lower Burnt Hilĺ.

Posted: 17 Aug 2018, 03:58
by Stanley
Should be OK Bodge, we seldom get frost hard enough to affect underground services. Last time I can remember when it was a big problem was the winter of 1962 which was a bummer! I was on the tramp at the time and I can tell you it was one of the most miserable winters of my life.......