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water system
Hi Guys
I will appreciate if some one could help. I have to get a new house and I am not sure which water system to buy. Water is hard in my area. I am thinking of buying a water softener system but I am concerned about the salt. And also I am not sure if reverse osmosis is the right choice. I read some where that one should buy both water softener and reverse osmosis system. Please advice. Thanks in advance Mp |
water system
mp wrote:
Hi Guys I will appreciate if some one could help. I have to get a new house and I am not sure which water system to buy. Water is hard in my area. I am thinking of buying a water softener system but I am concerned about the salt. And also I am not sure if reverse osmosis is the right choice. I read some where that one should buy both water softener and reverse osmosis system. Please advice. Thanks in advance Mp It depends on what you what the water system to do. For the house a water softener works pretty well, for your fish tanks, a water softener is not a good idea, a Reverse Osmosis unit with DI is best, for drinking just the RO is a great way to go. So if it was me, I would put a softener on the house, then have an RO for drinking water and put a DI on it for the aquarium. Kim www.jensalt.com |
water system
"mp" wrote in message
ups.com... Hi Guys I will appreciate if some one could help. I have to get a new house and I am not sure which water system to buy. Water is hard in my area. I am thinking of buying a water softener system but I am concerned about the salt. The water softening system is nice when you take a shower or use it in the washing machine, but you do not want it to improve the water you use to make seawater for your aquarium. Better to use the hard water right out of the tap which, of itself, is not a problem. Seawater *is* hard water. And also I am not sure if reverse osmosis is the right choice. Also a bummer. If your tap water is hard, you will be replacing membranes constantly. The problem is trace phosphates. The calcium in your hard water is not a problem but your reverse osmosis has to deal with large amounts of calcium salts in order to get at the trace of phosphate you do need to get rid of. *IF* you are lucky enough to have low phospate tap water, feel free to use it. If that's the case, the fact that it is hard won't hurt! When I had to deal with this, I would purchase de-ionized water from a local health food store which had in bulk. This I would use for the large, initial, tank fill. Then I would use my own Sears distiller for make up water and water changes. Distilling is the only practical way I know for dealing with hard water. You need to clean the stainless steel distilling pot with vinegar frequently but that is cheap and easy compared to replacing membranes for reverse osmosis. read some where that one should buy both water softener and reverse osmosis system. Maybe! Maybe your reverse osmosis filter will hold up better. I doubt it but someone else will have to chime in here. Thomas Bartkus |
water system
Is the water well water, or city water?
Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets mp wrote on 8/22/2006 11:19 AM: Hi Guys I will appreciate if some one could help. I have to get a new house and I am not sure which water system to buy. Water is hard in my area. I am thinking of buying a water softener system but I am concerned about the salt. And also I am not sure if reverse osmosis is the right choice. I read some where that one should buy both water softener and reverse osmosis system. Please advice. Thanks in advance Mp |
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