lwarden
Guru
Yes, came down on a truck in May. Not a scratch on it.Thanks for the warm welcome. Good to see you. Did you get the new boat home safe and sound?
(Sorry for the derail)
Yes, came down on a truck in May. Not a scratch on it.Thanks for the warm welcome. Good to see you. Did you get the new boat home safe and sound?
Article here on acidic water from RO
https://www.123filter.com/ac/why-re... absorbs CO2 from,a solution of carbonic acid.
Just finished recommissioning the SeaRecovery. Right at the machine you put in an element that looks just like a typical filter but it’s job is to remineralize the output water and ensure proper pH. Suspect other brands have the same thing as that element looks pretty generic.
Any idea what the pH is at the galley sink?
Also the part number of the filter cartridge you mentioned?
OMNIPURE - K2551 Calcite/Corosex Water Filter is the one I am looking at
$50 plus delivery each in Oz
$15 in the US - but freight was friggen insane
$30 inc delivery to Oz from Israel of all places
The ones that go in a housing are $85 each here
https://mywaterfilter.com.au/produc...iCGULmOsm33V-PI-u34I2qiqPXGmG73TvCQfr4Os38f5Y
Always said I never wanted a bloody watermaker
5 years using tap water and never an issue
Spend a couple of grand buying an RO and had my hand in my pocket ever since
KISS
Thank you for the information.
The price of the cartridge does seem to be expensive.
I wonder if a carbon filter would accomplish the same things.
Carbon does get rid of the last bit of chlorine if you let shore water sit and off gas it for ~1 week but doesn’t add any minerals nor does it change the pH. The mineralization filters adds minerals then there’s little or no absorption of CO2 from the air so no acid production. You easily get to neutral Ph of ~7. I paid $30 for an extra. Should last ~6m. It’s the 10u paper filters you replace more often. They’re generic and cheap.
Beyond RO also have a General Ecology filter on its own spigot in this boat at the galley sink for drinking water. It’s $126 and good for ~1000g. Still cheaper than buying bottled water and no bottles to fill up the garbage cans. Shore water run through it tastes wonderful.
Talking to the guys around the club that have water makers, nobody mentioned all the water chemistry involved. My boat neighbour visits his boat a couple of days a week to escape his wife and and drink his scotch. He uses his water maker exclusively, drawing water from Vancouver harbour. He has never pickled it and couldn't recall the make of it when I asked him about it.
I was thinking about installing one, now I'm not too sure. I don't think it can be as complicated as this discussion makes it out to be.
It's kind of like what type of oil is best for your engine. Is a 40 year old engine really that picky as long as it is changed? Or the lure to catch your fish. Are fish that smart? I think simplicity is overlooked in doing simple things.
Talking to the guys around the club that have water makers, nobody mentioned all the water chemistry involved. My boat neighbour visits his boat a couple of days a week to escape his wife and and drink his scotch. He uses his water maker exclusively, drawing water from Vancouver harbour. He has never pickled it and couldn't recall the make of it when I asked him about it.
I was thinking about installing one, now I'm not too sure. I don't think it can be as complicated as this discussion makes it out to be.
It's kind of like what type of oil is best for your engine. Is a 40 year old engine really that picky as long as it is changed? Or the lure to catch your fish. Are fish that smart? I think simplicity is overlooked in doing simple things.
Talking to the guys around the club that have water makers, nobody mentioned all the water chemistry involved. My boat neighbour visits his boat a couple of days a week to escape his wife and and drink his scotch. He uses his water maker exclusively, drawing water from Vancouver harbour. He has never pickled it and couldn't recall the make of it when I asked him about it.
I was thinking about installing one, now I'm not too sure. I don't think it can be as complicated as this discussion makes it out to be.
It's kind of like what type of oil is best for your engine. Is a 40 year old engine really that picky as long as it is changed? Or the lure to catch your fish. Are fish that smart? I think simplicity is overlooked in doing simple things.
I like the idea of a "filter" to add back minerals. I'll be looking into that as an addition as I drink RO water all the time.
Adding the minerals back into the water is actually quite a complicated process.
Adding the minerals back into the water is actually quite a complicated process.
RO water is indeed empty water, there are no minerals in it at all and drinking that water can actually be dangerous if that is the only thing you drink. Your body needs the minerals and it is not getting any from RO water.
Water companies that work with RO use a 6 or 7 step process to put minerals back into the water and that also needs to be done in the correct levels, it is not a matter of just adding something.
RO water is indeed safe for drinking as it is not poisonous, but you need the minerals, so perhaps start taking pills that can give you the daily dosage of minerals, so that you get that back up to speed again.
Adding the minerals back into the water is actually quite a complicated process.
RO water is indeed empty water, there are no minerals in it at all and drinking that water can actually be dangerous if that is the only thing you drink. Your body needs the minerals and it is not getting any from RO water.
Water companies that work with RO use a 6 or 7 step process to put minerals back into the water and that also needs to be done in the correct levels, it is not a matter of just adding something.
RO water is indeed safe for drinking as it is not poisonous, but you need the minerals, so perhaps start taking pills that can give you the daily dosage of minerals, so that you get that back up to speed again.
Simi, what is your water temperature? Our 150 lph/40gph Seawaterpro is rated thus with ambient water temperature of 25 Celsius / 77 Fahrenheit.
With a water temp here in Puget Sound of say 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 C), our measured output is around 28 to 30 gph, (106 to 113 litres/hr)
:
Well RO water has varying degrees of other minerals as evidenced by varying conductivity measurements. But....that very pure water is somewhat corrosive as water is considered a universal solvent. You have heard that nature abhors a vacuum, similarly water abhors purity and seeks to dissolve what it can. I think I must get all the minerals I need because I drink RO water on the boat and at home, but I do eat a lot of food. Some drinking water companies, I would propose, add minerals for flavor rather than health. If I buy water at the store it is drinking water not distilled. I found this on the internet:
The additives being put into water are those naturally found in water and the quantities of these additives are likely too small to be of much significance. “If you had pure water by itself, it doesn’t have any taste,” says Bob Mahler, Soil Science and Water Quality professor at the University of Idaho. “So companies that sell bottled water will put in calcium, magnesium or maybe a little bit of salt.”
Yeah, I hear people say that but if you aren't getting enough vitamins and minerals from your food diet you're doing something wrong imho
And while it may strip all minerals from it when you first put in new membranes what about when they age a bit?
We currently have a TDS around 420 and won't consider replacement until in the 800's.