I'm sorry, you advised removing the petri dish lid and smelling it. Just thought that was very strange and everyone else I mentioned it to, thought likewise. But you have your ways.
Sorry Gary, I was not misrepresenting anything you said.
You advised me to remove the lid off of a petri dish containing an active culture of coliform and sniff it to register an odor so that I could compare it to odors found in well
water samples. No misrepresentation there.
I had never mentioned your name so if you want to claim such a testing method, I will be sure to pass your wisdom on to others.
Since this is obviously going in circles, I'll comment no more on this topic.
Since you have said that you have never done a Coliform bacteria test yourself, I guess you don't know that you must open the petri dish, or the presence/absence sample container to properly dispose of the test results. If you do enough tests, and dispose of the samples properly (pour it down the toilet), you get acquainted with the various odors to possibly be able to guess which water in the future may have Coliform bacteria in it. But then you must not be smelling your prospective customers' water when you collect samples you use to attempt to sell them a water softener. Familiarizing yourself with the odors was my suggestion if you recall. It was not as you misrepresented it here and on 15-18 other forums where we post, to be a test to identify Coliform, it was to enable you to be able to tell a customer their water may be contaminated before the Coliform bacteria test was done. IOWs it was a FYI thing for you to use to become a better water treatment guy instead of just a Kinetico softener salesman.