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I'd think so...but I've got noView attachment 355754
Just got finished boiling some water and this is what I ended up with. Seems pretty bad. I ordered a hardness test so I can properly size a water softener. This seems excessive, even without a test. Wondering if I need some kind of filter before the water softener. This is city water. Thoughts?
Your city should be able to tell you what hardness level they are sending your way. Compare this to your test to see if they are FOS. We did and they were.View attachment 355754
Just got finished boiling some water and this is what I ended up with. Seems pretty bad. I ordered a hardness test so I can properly size a water softener. This seems excessive, even without a test. Wondering if I need some kind of filter before the water softener. This is city water. Thoughts?
Illegal to do where I live. Yeah, it's an incredibly stupid regulationWe run rain water through a ceramic filter and only use that for drinking and cooking. We use city water for everything else.
Wow, I thought we had hard water here in Vegas. Apparently it's not as bad as I thought after seeing this. If the calcium carbonate is that bad, you should see evidence of it around faucet openings. It it's that bad you likely have build up in your home's plumbing system as well. It'll be hell on your water heater too, shortens the life span of them a fair bit.View attachment 355754
Just got finished boiling some water and this is what I ended up with. Seems pretty bad. I ordered a hardness test so I can properly size a water softener. This seems excessive, even without a test. Wondering if I need some kind of filter before the water softener. This is city water. Thoughts?
Our 10 year high end water heaters last 6 years tops. I drain and flush about once a month.Wow, I thought we had hard water here in Vegas. Apparently it's not as bad as I thought after seeing this. If the calcium carbonate is that bad, you should see evidence of it around faucet openings. It it's that bad you likely have build up in your home's plumbing system as well. It'll be hell on your water heater too, shortens the life span of them a fair bit.
But do you replace the anode rod as required? I'm guessing not...Our 10 year high end water heaters last 6 years tops. I drain and flush about once a month.
There's no anode rod in propane water heaters.But do you replace the anode rod as required? I'm guessing not...
Knock on wood, but I've never heard of this happening around here. Maybe your guys water is a lot harder? I would say majority use about the same amount of salt as you mentioned.Just as a FYI if you get a softener and are on a septic be prepared to have issues. We only got 13 years out of our drain field before the salt plugged it. I don’t know how much salt the previous owner ran but our hardness isn’t bad. I go thru about 10-15 bags a year tops. That salt filled the pores of the soil and basically made it waterproof. The backup of water post septic tank was over 1200 gallons of water. That all had to get pumped out of the dry wells and drain field before we could do any excavation.
We ended up having to dig the entire drain field up and remove the sand and stone. Once backfilled with new stone 1’ below the salt line the system went back to draining fine.
That's interesting. Not to disagree but I've never seen that before. Our softener system, several softeners and multiple water heaters, have been on septic for 20 years. It's a 2000 gallon tank and 600 feet of Infiltrator septic. Adding to that our soil is very clay like. It sounds like the leach field was undersized. An Infiltrator system adds %30 to a rock and pipe system.Just as a FYI if you get a softener and are on a septic be prepared to have issues. We only got 13 years out of our drain field before the salt plugged it. I don’t know how much salt the previous owner ran but our hardness isn’t bad. I go thru about 10-15 bags a year tops. That salt filled the pores of the soil and basically made it waterproof. The backup of water post septic tank was over 1200 gallons of water. That all had to get pumped out of the dry wells and drain field before we could do any excavation.
We ended up having to dig the entire drain field up and remove the sand and stone. Once backfilled with new stone 1’ below the salt line the system went back to draining fine.
Knock on wood, but I've never heard of this happening around here. Maybe your guys water is a lot harder? I would say majority use about the same amount of salt as you mentioned.
funny, google says otherwise, it does not seem to matter gas vs propane...they all have one....but maybe my googling is bad. Just thought I would mention it, 99% of people have no idea it needs to be replaced regularly.There's no anode rod in propane water heaters.