![]() |
#11
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
My house is on a well too. I filter the water when it enters the house with a cannister filter, then I tee off for my RO unit before the water softener. It's hard to tell from your post but it kind of sounds like your drinking water is softened as well? It is not recommended to drink soft water, for the same reasons. Your body needs those minerals. Just me 2 cents, please feel free to correct me. I am by no means an expert. LOL |
#12
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Quote:
I never used soft water in the tank, as it ran through the ro unit first. Soft water is much easier on an ro membrane than the hard cold well water, which is murder on them. An ro/di removes everything from the water anyways, so not sure what you mean regarding the soft water removing minerals. As a matter of fact I never filtered enough. I never ran a post di then. Big mistake as the high alk. of the well water, which a di removes, often screwed up my levels when mixed with Instant Ocean salt. No soft water was used for human consumption, as it was passed through the ro before going to the fridge and sink. Pure soft water was teed to the rest of the house. This was the suggested procedure. We once had a long thread on it on the chemistry forum at RC, and someone brought up similar points to you but Randy agreed with the way I have mentioned here. I to am not an expert but just relating my experience. Perhaps someone who works in this field can add more. I have often wondered how the thousands of country folks who run water softeners and have no idea what an ro unit even is, get their drinking water. When I asked out in the country, they said they just drank it from the tap. Something I would not do also.
__________________
Doug |
#13
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Here are a few links to some RC threads. I dont usually link another board but though it may offer some good info in this case. There was a lot of them. The last thread has someone posting another view but most agree with what I posted. I also seen a link to an article, which I never read yet.
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showth...water+softener http://reefcentral.com/forums/showth...water+softener http://reefcentral.com/forums/showth...water+softener Hope some of this helps.
__________________
Doug |
#14
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Slick Fork: I haven't seen any adverse effects on the well or any other part of the system. The well is 40 years old this year, as far as I can tell the pump is only the second one that has been installed. There is a chance that noone else can remember another pump change. The pump that is in there now is a 1 hp, the well delivers about 35 gpm, and this pump is 11 years old.
|
#15
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
I am stilll confused. If your water comes from the well, then to the water softener and finally to your RO unit all your water has been softened. Right? That was the very first thing that happened to the water. The softening process removes all the hard minerals from the water so somewhere along the line those minerals would have to be put back in the water in order for it to no longer be soft. Perhaps softeners do that? Maybe they put exceptable levels back in the water. I wouldn't think so as water straight from a softener is not recommended for consumption. This is due to the low mineral levels. The RO unit won't put anything back in the water, it's nothing but a pre-filter, RO membrane (super tight filter) and carbon. So by my figuring you end up with super filtered soft water, that has been treated with carbon. Like I said I am no expert though. LOL Last edited by bassman; 11-18-2007 at 06:18 PM. |
#16
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Quote:
Ok I see what you're concern is. I thought it was regarding drinking soft water itself. Its the lack of minerals then. Is that not taken out by rodi? Would that not make it unhealthy then also? I though read a thread on that someplace and it was stated that the minerals lost can be compensated for elsewhere? Most people purchase store ro water to drink. I see on the dispenser where one can add minerals. Doubt many use it ? I dont know.
__________________
Doug |
#17
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
No, the RO unit does not remove the all the minerals, RO units are only filters, nothing more. Yes minerals can be put back into your water, why bother though? Just don't remove them in the first place. From what I have been told/read what a person is supposed to do in the home is to take the line from the well and filter it with a in-line canister filter. From there you tee the line. One goes to your softener. The other goes to your cold water tap in the kitchen and to your outside taps. You would use this for drinking, watering flowers, lawn, etc. and to feed your R/O unit. |
#18
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Quote:
The reason we want RO units for our tanks is because we want to know EXACTLY what's added to the water. So we pull everything out and add in what we need. As far as drinking water goes, maybe a glass of gatorade every day is enough. Hillbilly: So by jacking up the PSI on your pressure system, you haven't found any adverse effects on the well. How about the house and drinkers, etc. My big fear with that is having joints that can't handle the pressure and springing leaks where I can't find them until there's major damage done. |
#19
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
I guess a water softener does the exact same thing as RO then? or does it leave some minerals in? Is the need for a softener just to treat larger amounts of water? |
#20
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() My understanding of a softener is that it just replaces some minerals with others to make the water "feel" less hard, but I'm not 100% on that one
|