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They deal with different problems, and you may need both; an analysis of the water will tell. A softener is specifically to deal with calcium and magnesium ions in the water; it replaces these with sodium derived from salt. Ca and Mg are noxious: they cause soap to curd; can crystallize in clothes, causing premature failure; and can precipitate in pipes, necessitating replacing the plumbing. Ten grains per gallon is considered very hard, and water of this hardness or more really needs to be treated.

Filtration deals with any of a host of issues: sediment is the most important. Run cold water into a large jar and let it sit overnight; if you see any fallout at the bottom of the jar, filtration is advised.

Of the other possible contaminants of water, iron is the most problematic. There are treatment methods for dealing with it; seek the advice of a specialist if it is a problem for you.

2007-10-12 11:14:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Water Softener Vs Water Filter

2016-11-08 06:35:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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What's the difference between a water softener and water filtration system? Do I need both in a new home?

2015-08-16 19:08:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Reverse Osmosis Vs Water Softener

2016-12-30 10:26:43 · answer #4 · answered by gori 3 · 0 0

Water filtration is just the system which you use to purify the water for a healthy and safe home use. The water softner is a salt like pallets that you have to add to the water after it is treated or filtered. The water loses through the city purification process most of its natural ingrients due the clorine and other chemicals used to clean it. This salt pallets add back all the enzimes, minerals and other ingredients the water lost in the process.

2007-10-12 11:15:45 · answer #5 · answered by Kunno H 1 · 0 1

Though it sounds similar, there is wide difference between these two systems.
Softener is something which removes salts of Ca & Mg from water by exchanging ions of Na which softens water.The main purpose here is to replace salts of Ca and Mg which converts hard to soft water. This soft water lathers readily with soap as compared to hard water and it wont have any sort of precipitate like in hard water which can choke water supply lines.

Filteration is the system for removal of impurities in water which are toxic (arsenic , iron). It helps to reduce TDS & TSS in water and makes and makes it potable. Water is potable even if you get 250-300ppm as it contains dissolved salts which helps in improving proper functioning of RBC's.

2014-01-15 21:30:53 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Water softening uses an ionic filter to remove minerals (like calcium and magnesium) from "hard" water (water containing lots of minerals). This can be done to a large volume of water realtively quickly, meaning your whole house can be supplied by the water from a water softener.

A water filter - specifically a reverse osmosis filter - is a thin membrane that has countess microsopic holes in it. These holes allow the water molecules to pass, but not much else. There can be other stages of filtration, including carbon filters to remove odors and ionic resin filters to remove any remaining ions left in the water. However, because of the relatively slow filtering action of the reverse osmosis process, you can only get about 100 gallons per day on even the largest home reverse osmosis systems.

Soft water is beneficial, because it reduces the buildup of residue on plumbing fixtures (spigots, mostly) caused by hard water deposits. The absence of hard water minerals also makes soap more effective, which means that you would use less for laundry, shampooing, etc., than if you had hard water.

Filtered water removes all kinds of materials from water, including metals and poisons (like arsenic) that are present in small amounts in tap water. I have a 6-stage reverse osmosis system that takes tap water from about 13,000 ppm of disolved solids to about 15 ppm (it came with an electronic ppm meter for testing the water).

So, if you want absolutely pure water for drinking, cooking, an ice maker, etc., get a water filter system. If you want to get rid of calcium and magnesium in your bathing and cleaning water, get a water softener. If you want to go all out, get both.

2007-10-12 11:24:21 · answer #7 · answered by Paul in San Diego 7 · 1 1

Water filtration systems use a variety of techniques to trap suspended particles from your water. As water flows through a water filtration system, unwanted particles stick to the filter and only pure water molecules are allowed to pass through the other side. Water filters do not, however, trap dissolved hardness minerals from your water.

Water softening systems use a process called “ion exchange” to remove dissolved hardness minerals from your water. As water flows through a water softening system, resin beads exchange sodium ions for calcium and magnesium ions, resulting in softer water. Water softeners do not remove suspended particles from your water.
Water softener vs. water filter: Determining which one is right for you

2014-05-12 18:58:05 · answer #8 · answered by Martin Culky 2 · 0 0

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I always use the Britta water filter pitchers. I keep two: one for drinking water and one for tea kettle/coffee maker. They work fine filtering a lot of the nastiness out of water. And it certainly beats buying bottled water, much less being more environmentally "green". Considering the prices of bottled water and the fact that most bottled water is essentially filtered tap water, I don't know why more people don't use these things.

2016-04-07 06:13:37 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

short and sweet answer.. the softner will safe you money on only using lesser soap in laundry .. less cost of buying chemicals to get rid of hard water build up in your tubs and toilets.. so get a softner..

the filteration.. to take away the yukies out of your drinking and cooking water.. you dont want to taste bad water trust me.. but you have to get a good one .. there are alot out in the market that promise the world but are no good.. ask questions at your local hardware store on what they have..

hope this helped you out ..
good luck

2007-10-12 14:11:18 · answer #10 · answered by lillypop07 2 · 1 0

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