2001 - Volume #25, Issue #1, Page #32
[ Sample Stories From This Issue | List of All Stories In This Issue | Print this story
| Read this issue]
Aquarium Valve Removes Odors From Well Water
Richard works as assistant city engineer in Champaign, Ill., so he knew that cities use aeration to remove odors from water. So he figured he could find a way to do it, too.
He decided to try to do it with an aquarium pump and stone. What he did was to put in a tank that mimics an aquarium. Once water has been "treated", it's pulled from there into the household pressure system.
He set up a 65-gal. plastic tank of the type you can buy at most farm supply stores. To maintain the necessary water level in the tank, Richard rigged up a flush box water valve and float. At the lower end there's a compression fitting to allow it to go through the wall of the tank. Just inside the tank, he installed a brass elbow. Then, he put a special fitting with a WC thread into the elbow. After that was in place, he installed a conventional flush box control. Marley also fitted the tank with an overflow outlet to prevent damage if the float valve should ever fail.
"Any plumber can help rig up these fittings," he notes.
To supply the needed aeration, he installed a standard aquarium stone in the bottom of the tank and fed in air from an air pump just outside the tank. He wired the air pump to the pump switch so it turns on when the house pump runs.
Marley also added an in-line carbon filter to the water line. He says once he got the sytem going, the odor completely disappeared.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Richard Marley, 445 County Road 2500N, Mahomet, Ill. 61853 (ph 217 586-5750).
Click here to download page story appeared in.
Click here to read entire issue
To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.