Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#46
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Shall do.
tks |
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#47
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Got Bob installing a Nova Water filter system the 1st week in November. Can't wait to have the system up and running.
Bob
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Patriots Nation |
#48
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Bob, I get no answer when I call the number listed. How do I get in touch with you?
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#49
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Hi, I'm at 631 338.1048
Bob |
#50
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Just a reminder to all our customers that have their systems over 12-15 months to call us to schedule cartridge replacements.
The price installed is $95 for all three and you will get the new 5 micron carbon. (if you prefer to install yourself they are $70 for a set of three) tks Bob |
#51
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Would you please educate us on Salt-Free Water Conditioners vs. Salt Using Water Softeners. Costs, maintenance. Which we could use if we only care about scale/
Thank you |
#52
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I have not seen scale in pipes here including homes that are over 15 years old.
Scale is more of a concern in copper pipes all the pipes here are CPVC (plastic) The scale you may be referring to is claimed by salesmen selling water softeners, I assume that's where you may have heard that, if it's something else please explain further. |
#53
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Isn't scale the white granular calcium deposits found inside the water closet,along the edge of the pool,etc
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#54
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Again,could you please educate us on the difference between salt free water conditioners and salt using water softeners. Thank you.
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#55
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The deposits your speaking of is surface deposits, I was speaking to build up inside of pipes.
surface deposits which can be wiped clean with CLR 2-3 times a year and be gone, no need for a water softener. But to answer your question Salt based water softeners use an electronic metered valve mounted atop a fiberglass resin tank that meter water by the gallon and then run a cleaning cycle when the ion resin bed reaches a saturation point. During the cleaning cycle, the electronic valve cycles a series of back flushes to purge the hardness particulates that have been captured from the system and flush them down a drain line. The sodium is also replenished in the resin bed during the cycle and all is ready to go again. salt free In the process above (true water softening), hardness minerals are actually removed from the water. In the salt-free process minerals are retained in the water, but their form is changed so they will not adhere to surfaces. Water is processed through a catalytic media using a physical process called Template Assisted Crystallization (TAC). What happens is the hardness minerals are converted to a hardness crystal that is not able to bind to surfaces. This is actually water conditioning, not softening. does that answer your question? |
#56
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Economics of each type of system? pros and cons? Maintenance costs? Thank you
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#57
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We don't advocate the use of them, they don't actually filter water.
It is my position far better results are obtained with our triple whole house filter, at considerable saving and maintenance over other types. see this page https://www.talkofthevillages.com/fo...d-water-91472/ |
#58
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Thank you Jimbo. Correct me if I'm wrong. It seems salt based systems are very expensive, often not necessary, and have high maintenance costs. Salt free water conditioners sort of polish the Ca and Mg so they don't adhere as much but they still end up being deposited after the water dries. i.e. expensive but don't do much?
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#59
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That sums it up, that's why the Triple is the best punch for the buck under $500 and $95 a year maintenance.
I'm disconnecting another softener (my 6th one) this Wednesday in fact, replacing it with Triple |
#60
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Closed Thread |
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