posted on Dec, 23 2008 @ 07:19 AM
Depending on where you live, a change of the condition of the water used for your city will result in a change of how it's treated. Water from a
flooding river requires more treatment than water from the same river during normal flow time. Dry conditions also have treatment needs not normally
experienced during normal conditions.
A chlorine or bleach odor, in drinking water, usually indicates not quite enough free chlorine in the water. It sounds funny, but the combined
chlorine releases the odor easier than free chlorine. Free chlorine is a term used to describe chlorine available to react with contaminates that the
treated water meets in the distribution system. Combined chlorine is a combination of chlorine and organic compounds, in the water, that have reacted
with each other but the organic compounds have not been 100% oxidized.
It is possible to have a chlorine odor from too much chlorine in drinking water. The dosage would be extremely high and I would seriously doubt it
would come from the water treatment plant. Where would it come from, someone asks? A main break and resulting treatment of the main to disinfect it
and then not enough flushing of the main, of superchlorinated water within the main, before it was placed back in service.
Take a sample of water to your water company or if it is a large city, have them send someone over to your place for an on the spot test.