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04/21/2008, 09:34 PM | #1 |
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ro/di water softeners?
We have picked out a commercial whole house water softener from Cano Labs, since I am a distributer ie, I get it at cost and it would run a small town. We have extremely hard water a farely high TDS. We are tired of replacing faucits. We are on well water also. Do I still need a RO filter? I figured I would at least need a DI upgrade some where in the system for the aquarium. ANy Idea's?
Thanks, Chris |
04/21/2008, 10:11 PM | #2 |
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The water softeners might help a bit, but they won't reduce alkalinity (I think) and might not remove all the copper or zinc that might come down the line. I don't think they remove phosphate or nitrate, either. I would still use an RO/DI. The water softener will help the RO membrane last longer, which is nice.
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Jonathan Bertoni |
04/22/2008, 06:18 AM | #3 |
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Thanks I wasn't sure but figured it would be a good idea to have both. If anyone else has any info it would be appriecated.
Thanks again, Chris |
04/22/2008, 06:32 AM | #4 |
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ya a softner will actually raise your TDS. I am in the water business to so I know about this stuff. Softners actually tank certain minerals and metals and convert into a calcium bicarbonate. This softens the water. My TDS after my softner is over 500 TDS. Doesn't mean my water is no good, its just extremely hard. Its mostly minerals and not heavy metals. So run a RO/DI after your softner. Your softner though will be a huge favour to your RO membrane since the without the softner, if you have hard water it will scale up your membrane sooo fast.
They will work together in a nice tag team
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04/22/2008, 06:38 AM | #5 |
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I would suggest using RO/DI after the softener.
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04/22/2008, 07:14 AM | #6 |
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Thank you all for the input, I will be ordering everything this week.
Thanks Chris |
04/22/2008, 07:48 AM | #7 | |
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Quote:
I thought it was ion exchange - calcium, magnesium and some metals (iron) are exchanged for sodium. Sometimes the exchange is 2 for one (1 calcium for 2 sodiums) this is why the TDS increases after a softener.
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04/22/2008, 11:32 AM | #8 |
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Water softeners usually work by ionic exchange. They replace the calcium and magnesium in the water with sodium from salt. That's why they use the salt.
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Jonathan Bertoni |
04/22/2008, 11:37 AM | #9 | |
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Quote:
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Don't believe everything you think! Current Tank Info: USED TO HAVE a 680 gallon Display Tank -120x48x30h- (Total System Volume 1100 gallons), and ALOT of other equipment. |
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