secondary drinking water standards – Water Testing Blog & Water Test Kit Store http://watertestingblog.com "It's your water, your health.. and ultimately your LIFE!" Thu, 30 Dec 2021 07:33:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.5 Sulfates in Drinking Water http://watertestingblog.com/2010/12/02/sulfates-in-drinking-water/ http://watertestingblog.com/2010/12/02/sulfates-in-drinking-water/#respond Thu, 02 Dec 2010 13:03:48 +0000 http://watertestingblog.com/?p=3186 When recently discussing hydrogen sulfide in water, commonly referred to as ‘that nasty rotten egg smell’, we mentioned that in some cases sulfates served as the source for of the gas — usually through some sort of chemical reduction or breakdown of the sulfates.

Contains Sulfate Tests
WaterWorks/SenSafe
Water Quality Test Kit
Contains Sulfate Tests

While it may not sound like something that occurs naturally in drinking water, it most certainly does. Many different reasons exist for why or how sulfate gets into water supplies and the United States Environmental Protection Agency has set the secondary maximum contaminant level (SMCL) for sulfate in drinking water at 250 milligrams per liter (mg/L or ppm).

For those who do not know, the SMCL’s pertain to aesthetic qualities and characteristics of water such as taste and odor, not matters pertaining to health issues. The Federal Government does not enforce SMCL’s but it does provide them as suggested guidelines which it does encourage public water systems to follow.

You can view the EPA’s Secondary Drinking Water Standards on this web site here.

In recent times, however, some health officials have taken a keen interest in sulfate contamination because of growing suspicions that if ingested in high quantities it can cause diarrhea. Apparently some segments of the world’s population experience bouts of diarrhea when they suddenly start ingesting water that has high sulfate concentrations after residing in areas with much lower sulfate in water concentrations.

How many water systems exceed the EPA’s SMCL for sulfate in drinking water? In an article on the EPA’s EPA’s website, experts estimated that roughly 3% of the public drinking water systems in the United States may have sulfate levels at or above 250 mg/L.

eXact Micro 7+ Water Testing Meter
eXact Micro 7+ Meter

Can the general public test for sulfates in drinking water?

As a matter of fact, yes they can. SenSafe manufactures an easy-to-use, fast and reliable test strip that works quite well for field testing of well water, ground water and surface water. You can find SenSafe’s Sulfate Check product in both the COMPLETE Water Quality Test Kit and the Water Quality Test Kit in our Water Test Kit Store.

Prefer to use a meter for your testing needs? The eXact Micro 7+ Water Testing Meter has the ability to perform that test when used with the correct reagentstrip.

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Secondary Drinking Water Standards http://watertestingblog.com/2008/07/22/secondary-drinking-water-standards/ http://watertestingblog.com/2008/07/22/secondary-drinking-water-standards/#respond Tue, 22 Jul 2008 14:34:48 +0000 http://watertestingblog.com/2008/07/22/secondary-drinking-water-standards/ Consumers often ask the question, “OK, so my water is safe to drink according to my local Water Authority and a recent certified laboratory test, but why does it taste funny, smell bad and/or appear so cloudy?”

The answer to that question lies in something called Secondary Drinking Water Standards. The United States Environmental Protection Agency makes suggestions as to limitations for water parameters that do not necessarily pose health risks to humans, but can affect drinking water’s aesthetic properties (i.e. color, taste, odor, etc.).

Contaminant Secondary MCL Noticeable Effects above the Secondary MCL
Aluminum 0.05 to 0.2 mg/L* colored water
Chloride 250 mg/L salty taste
Color 15 color units visible tint
Copper 1.0 mg/L metallic taste; blue-green staining
Corrosivity Non-corrosive metallic taste; corroded pipes/ fixtures staining
Fluoride 2.0 mg/L tooth discoloration
Foaming agents 0.5 mg/L frothy, cloudy; bitter taste; odor
Iron 0.3 mg/L rusty color; sediment; metallic taste; reddish or orange staining
Manganese 0.05 mg/L black to brown color; black staining; bitter metallic taste
Odor (i.e. Hydrogen Sulfide or Tannins) 3 TON (threshold odor number) “rotten-egg”, musty or chemical smell
pH 6.5 – 8.5 low pH: bitter metallic taste; corrosion
high pH:
slippery feel; soda taste; deposits
Silver 0.1 mg/L skin discoloration; graying of the white part of the eye
Sulfate 250 mg/L salty taste
Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) 500 mg/L hardness; deposits; colored water; staining; salty taste
Zinc 5 mg/L metallic taste
* mg/L is milligrams of substance per liter of water

If you need to test for any of the above items, we currently carry testing products for a number of them in the Water Test Kit Store (Shop.WaterTestingBlog.Com).

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