Reef Central Online Community

Go Back   Reef Central Online Community > General Interest Forums > New to the Hobby
Blogs FAQ Calendar Mark Forums Read

Notices

User Tag List

Reply
Thread Tools
Unread 01/17/2015, 08:16 AM   #1
DJasak
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 197
Question Filtered Water vs Tap Water?

Hey guys-

So yesterday I made a post about my diatom issue and was convinced to get an RO/DI unit to have higher quality water. But in the mean time, between where I'm at now, and saving the money I need to buy the unit, I'm trying to keep the cost of things down as much as possible, simply because I'm expecting a baby within the next month and I need to save every penny I have! So I'm not going to go out and buy 30 gallons of distilled or purified water because what may make sense to me, may not make sense to her. So my question is I have a Brita filter that we use to make our drinking water, can I use the water from a Brita to do water changes between now and when I get the RO/DI unit or is there not much of a difference? Thank you guys for all your help and input, it's really helped clarify things and give me a better understanding in the short time I've been on here.


DJasak is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 01/17/2015, 08:21 AM   #2
dkeller_nc
Registered Member
 
dkeller_nc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Central NC
Posts: 5,062
Presuming your Brita filter has a non-expended cartridge (i.e., it's "fresh"), then yes, running your tap water through it would be better than using tap water for your tank and a dechlorinator. The Brita will only remove chlorine/chloramine - it will do nothing to remove dissolved ions like copper.

Because evaporation concentrates the contaminants in tap water, I would strongly advise you to purchase distilled (not "purified for drinking") water from the grocery store to make up for evaporation from your tank. You can use the filtered tap water to make seawater for water changes until you can afford to set-up an RODI. Whether or not this works out for you sensitively depends on where you live and the amount of dissolved substances in your water. Some of us live in the East and have very soft tap water (mine is about 20 ppm TDS), and this is ideal; others in the West have extremely hard water in the 400ppm - 700ppm range. That'll be sort of OK to use for making seawater on an emergency basis, but absolute disaster to use as evaporation make-up for any length of time.


dkeller_nc is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 01/17/2015, 08:34 AM   #3
DJasak
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 197
Ok thank you, I have a fresh cartridge I can put in. Not sure how I would do this or if it's even worth ny time but what about boiling the water, collecting the vapor and condensing it back to water, like a little science experiment. Would that help remove all the contaminants?


DJasak is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 01/17/2015, 08:51 AM   #4
dkeller_nc
Registered Member
 
dkeller_nc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Central NC
Posts: 5,062
Quote:
Originally Posted by DJasak View Post
Ok thank you, I have a fresh cartridge I can put in. Not sure how I would do this or if it's even worth ny time but what about boiling the water, collecting the vapor and condensing it back to water, like a little science experiment. Would that help remove all the contaminants?
In theory, yes. But you'd have to do it with DIY still with all 316 stainless steel or glass components, and for your average person, this isn't practical. And it wouldn't be any cheaper than going to the grocery store and paying about $1/gallon for distilled water.


dkeller_nc is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
filtered water, tap water, water quality

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On



All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:20 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Powered by Searchlight © 2024 Axivo Inc.
Use of this web site is subject to the terms and conditions described in the user agreement.
Reef CentralTM Reef Central, LLC. Copyright ©1999-2022
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.