[Greenbuilding] [BULK] Re: Iron in water
George J. Nesbitt
geoedb at idiom.com
Tue Sep 5 21:28:26 CDT 2006
My big concern is that in removing an unwanted substance in the water,
that we remove that which we want, or add unhealthy substances in the
process. See www.healthywater.com for more insight.
The vortex stuff someone referred to reminds me of what was called a
flow form some time ago, not convinced.
Keith's link was interesting, water is such cool stuff, can't live without.
Lawrence Lile wrote:
>I'm in the same boat. I may need to remove iron and hydrogen sulphide from my water. Culligan says that the same filter they sell will work for both.
>
>Hydrogen sulphide can be caused by bacteria in the water digesting sulphates. This does not make me very happy about the quality of the county water I am getting. It goes away for a week if the county flushes the lines, then it comes back. Yeech. I wish I had drilled my own well.
>
>--Lawrence Lile
>
>________________________________
>
>From: greenbuilding-bounces at listserv.repp.org on behalf of George J. Nesbitt
>Sent: Sat 9/2/2006 9:24 PM
>To: Greenbuilder list
>Subject: [BULK] Re: [Greenbuilding] Iron in water
>
>
>
>1. Who makes it?
> To remove excess Iron (if it is staining fixtures or causes metallic
>taste) use a manganese sulphate/potassium filter or a manganese
>greensand filter.
>2. There is not such thing as an environmentally friendly water softener.
>See the discussion on "Acidic Water" and "Reverse Osmosis" both were in
>the past 2 months.
>I highly recommend researching health and water quality issues at
>www.healthywater.com
>
>
>Debra Havill wrote:
>
>
>
>>(1) Does anyone know anything about the iron-removing product for water softeners called "Crystal Clean?" It's advertised as organic, but that doesn't mean much of anything.
>> (2) Is there such a thing as an environmentally friendly 'salt' to use in wter softeners?
>>
>>
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