It has always been what I am talking about. To paraphrase you: "Reading is your friend".In what context is that relevant to the discussion at hand?
It has always been what I am talking about. To paraphrase you: "Reading is your friend".In what context is that relevant to the discussion at hand?
Depends on the feed water for your distilled. I have a Polar Bear water distiller in the basement that gets water from a dugout on my property and without charcoal filtration and a catalyst bed it has a lot of volatile organic compounds in it. Those won't hurt anything if used for plants but has an off taste for drinking. With the RO setup I one day will put together the only thing in it will be a few ppm of minerals from the hard water. I may run 2 RO filters in a row to get it as near to zero as I can. The water is about pH 8 and up to 400ppm depending on the season. Cleanest after spring melt but the element burned out so I'll get around to putting a new one in one of these days and sell it. Refurbished are going for around $1600Can. New element is around $100. New they're over 3G. This one has a 10gal SS storage tank with a spigot and pressure pump.
LOL you too! It's pouring rain here.Have an amazing day, errbody!!!
We have 3-3.5 days of rain in the forecast this week as well.LOL you too! It's pouring rain here.
It's the Mojave Desert so we see roughly 11 inches whether we need it or not. I do admit I thought about putting out a cup, collecting some rain and testing it's pH and EC. I am curious.We have 3-3.5 days of rain in the forecast this week as well.
You completely agree that there are standards that define industrial products and the words used to describe them?
Bro.. distilled water are pure 0.0000 water.
No matter if they started from sewage or ocean water, stop talking nonsense.
The best RO system in the world will never reach 0.0000 like distilled.
It is true some distilled water brands add stuff to it because it's mainly used in automotive industry rather drinking their jugs.
But, again, distilled water is the most pure of all methods known to men.
I believe they add minerals to RO and Distilled water because they will leach ions like crazy, so the minerals make it less potentially damaging.In what context is that relevant to the discussion at hand?
I don't know what you're on about. I said steam distilled, de-ionozied water had 0ppm but if the feed water has organic matter in it like the water from my dugout has some volatile organic molecules will come over with the steam that gives an off-taste to the water if used for drinking. Carbon filtration post-distilling will remove those.
I never said RO will be as pure. RO filters will only remove 90 - 95% of mineral salts so starting with 400ppm water the output should be around 30 - 40ppm. With a 2nd RO membrane in the line that can be reduced further to 3 or 4ppm.
Distilled water bought at stores can have fluoride added when it is for use to make baby food of all things and some can have minerals added as well. I have no clue as why they would add minerals if it was for use in the automotive industry but I don't buy it for that so you could be correct for all I know. I use RO water if I need to top up my car's cooling system as a few ppm isn't going to hurt anything.
The RO system I will be putting together with filter my feed water down to 0.5µ from the 5µ we have it at now for the tap water. I'll have a take-off right after the RO filter for use on plants then a feed to the UV filter which will have a take-off for use in my BUNN coffee maker then a feed to a calcite filter for 'polishing' the water and add back some minerals for better taste and raise the pH a bit for drinking water.
I have all the parts but haven't got around to hooking everything up yet but it will go like this pic. 1µ > standard carbon filter > 0.5µ carbon filter > RO > possible 2nd RO filter > UV > Calcite filter > drinking water.
View attachment 5363636
I believe they add minerals to RO and Distilled water because they will leach ions like crazy, so the minerals make it less potentially damaging.