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Distilled vs RO
Just wondering what the difference between Distilled water and Reverse Osmosis is.
Is one better than the other? I live in an apt so setting up an RO unit may not be possible, however my mother has a Distiller(stand alone unit not an on tap or brita) at her place. so I have free access to all the distilled water I'd need. Any suggestions? |
What kind of "distiller" doers she have? Distilling usually means Boiling the water, then collecting and condensating the steam. Distiller takes up room. Now, a RO unit is usually very compact. I have a 4 stage Kent RO/DI unit and I hang it off a nail in the entry room when not in use. When I use it, I set the unit in the kitchen sink. Its pretty small, and no need for permanent instalation.
Oh, and distilled water doesnt allways remove all the minerals and such |
How's the distiller made (copper tubing?) and who's paying the power bill?
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sorry to kind of thread jack but I only have one of those tap water purifier de-ionization filter things. and i was just wondering if that was good enough by itself. and i also have an ro unit but its nit ro/di so would that be better than the purifier thing?
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Distillers don?t do a good job with volatile chemicals with a low boiling point. Chloramines, for example, which many cities now use instead of chlorine as a disinfectant, aren't removed well by distillers. Reverse osmosis, with the carbon filters that accompany it, does a very good job with chloramines.
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You can put your R.O. water through your ionizaton unit. ________ XVS650 |
ok ill; try that thanks :)
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