Jump to content

Recommended Posts

We renovated a house a few years ago and had a water softener system installed by Fountain Softeners. I think about ?700 but well worth it. Refilling with block salt a few times a year no problem and very cheap. We forgot however to leave one kitchen tap on mains supply so now have to use bottled stuff for drinking as soft water does not taste very nice.
It is worth taking advice about your whole water system - certain types of hot water cylinder (such as stainless steel) may require some protection from the effects of the soft water - some types of protection used for your existing water supply may not work with a softer water input. It may also be an issue where in your system you put the softener - it is normal, I think, to break in to the water supply (mains) before it branches - but clearly the softener (which will be powered) needs space - and that may not be possible sufficiently close to where the main enters the house. Edited to note that you may indeed also want an un-softened supply (as mentioned above), e.g. for drinking water - so the exact plumbing details need to be got right.

I hope this all helps.


I live in a block flats and water comes into

a) Toilet room

b) Bath room: sink and bath

c) Kitchen


We can not tell whether the water comes from either the tank in the attic, or the mains, in all three rooms.

We could work it out but there's always here or Facebook to look at.


The water that comes into the kitchen, divides into two pipes.

One pipe feeds the cold tap, and the other goes into the filter, which then feeds into the combi boiler. From there, it feeds the hot water tap in the Kitchen sink, and the hot water taps in the bathroom bath and sink.


There should always be a tap that is NOT filtered if you have a separate stand alone filter such as Harvey's filters.

In our kitchen the cold tap is NOT filtered (and neither is the Bath or Sink cold tap).


You should not use filtered water to water plants because it has a higher salt level which will kill them!


If you have a combi boiler that is heating water you should check with boiler manufacturers that it is ok to use a filter with it; in some, made of aluminium, the salt water could corrode it.

PeckhamRose Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> We can not tell whether the water comes from

> either the tank in the attic, or the mains, in all

> three rooms.

> We could work it out but there's always here or

> Facebook to look at.


I'd want to know if my drinking water was coming out of the attic tank. Ew.


Turn the supply off from the tank and see what stops working.

I'd actually would like to clarify some of the confusion on the corrosion of a water softener

please find this report that Darragh from www.ewtechnologies.co.uk sent me.


http://ukwta.org/assets/NewFolder/BSi-Corrosion-Report-12.12.12.pdf


Have a chat with him, he's very knowledgable and super experienced in these projects

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • This presumably hasn't been done by vandals. It's hardly a Sycamore Gap situation. So if it's been done by professionals, unless it was a mistake (unlikely) there must have been a good reason, as it would have cost money. It would perhaps have been a good idea to put a notice on the tree explaining why such drastic work was done, but usually (I think) it would be either because of disease (often not noticeable on the surface) or that the roots or branches  were endangering nearby structures. As already said, nobody on here is likely to know. The tree department in Southwark Council are helpful in my (admittedly limited) experience. Please post on here when you have found out, as I agree what's left of the tree looks pretty odd. Depending on why the work was done, possibly they intend to remove the rest as well?
    • I have a very stupid question. I want to get a SIM card to put in an old mobile as a back up,  in case despite my best efforts my mobile gets stolen and I have no way of contacting anybody quickly, eg banks. Can I just buy any old cheap pay as you go  SIM card and put say ten pounds on it and it will then be fine for years (with the phone kept charged!) even if I don't use it, or do I have to use the phone  every so often to keep the SIM card valid?
    • I hate to see trees cut down to such an unfinished state. Unless the tree is home to wildlife, an effort should be made to remove & replace. Otherwise, it's just so useless & unsightly.
    • Given the level of care in Dulwich Park, I would not expect this to be careless or unnecessary. It will grow back.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...