Hi, I've posted this in the plumbing section, without any reply, so thought I'd try here instead!
We've had major problems with well water and manganese filters in an old cottage, and the water engineers have suggested that maybe the water pipes are not adequately earthed. They seem to think that the whole water system may be acting as a huge battery and causing copper from the pipes to be ingested into the water. This ends up turning my wife's hair green, turning the water blue when we add soap, no soapy suds in the washing up bowl and making the washing smell awful.
The water is pumped from a well (via filters) in a blue plastic pipe, no mains water, and we've a mixture of copper and plastic pipe around the house. I've been around and cannot find one earth to a water pipe, no earth to the gas pipe, and no earth spikes outside that I can see (but thats not to say that they're not hidden away somewhere!).
The only visable earthing I can see is around the meter and consumer unit (meter dated 2003, consumer unit installed 2006). There are 3 earth cables running into a junction box with one earth cable running out into a wall, and that's as far as I can see.
How can I test that the water pipes are adequately earthed?
Is this a plausible theory or just clutching at straws?
We've had major problems with well water and manganese filters in an old cottage, and the water engineers have suggested that maybe the water pipes are not adequately earthed. They seem to think that the whole water system may be acting as a huge battery and causing copper from the pipes to be ingested into the water. This ends up turning my wife's hair green, turning the water blue when we add soap, no soapy suds in the washing up bowl and making the washing smell awful.
The water is pumped from a well (via filters) in a blue plastic pipe, no mains water, and we've a mixture of copper and plastic pipe around the house. I've been around and cannot find one earth to a water pipe, no earth to the gas pipe, and no earth spikes outside that I can see (but thats not to say that they're not hidden away somewhere!).
The only visable earthing I can see is around the meter and consumer unit (meter dated 2003, consumer unit installed 2006). There are 3 earth cables running into a junction box with one earth cable running out into a wall, and that's as far as I can see.
How can I test that the water pipes are adequately earthed?
Is this a plausible theory or just clutching at straws?