Makes sense I didn’t know such low ppm was considered high iron. That quote was for iron and a sulphur aeration system. How does the sulfate level look? Based on those ppm it seems fine from what I read on the internet, but also that the human nose can detect even super low sulphur levels. So I’m still in the dark. Or is possible that the iron bacteria is causing that smell?
Edit: I just realized that I was tested for hydrogen sulfate, which seems to cause black slime which I don’t experience and seems to be rare. What I have is hydrogen sulfide but they didn’t test for that. I’m really trying to be lean on this but I was thinking of using a softener upstream of this thing (Gold series) which seems like overkill but don’t want to take chances: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004FVZHLC/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_1xWfBbF8K21QH
As you said, the softener can take out some iron and sulphur reducing the work this thing has to do.
Us too. We just replaced our ancient Culligan iron filter with a generic one from Amazon, which was easy to install and MUCH CHEAPER. Followed by a generic water softener.
I've found this which is about half price: https://www.amazon.com/Injection-manganese-Removal-Oxidizing-Water/dp/B004FVZHLC/ but a DIY system has the potential to be about 1/4 the price
try this air-injection system: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004FVZHLC or if that is not enough, they have some larger ones.