
Water Softeners
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Hard water (water containing calcium and magnesium molecules) enters the water softener.
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The resin beads within the softener are positively charged with sodium molecules clinging onto the resin beads.
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When the calcium and magnesium molecules pass through the resin beads, the calcium and magnesium take the place of the sodium.
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This causes the calcium and magnesium molecules to cling to the beads and the product water includes amounts of sodium instead.
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After an adequate amount of water has gone through the system, a backwashing cycle takes place.
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This is where the myth that salt is in soft water comes into play. During the backwash cycle, sodium chloride (table salt) passes through the resin beads. It is used to wash away the calcium, magnesium and here is where it splits. The chloride gets washed away with the calcium and the magnesium and only sodium is left.
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The sodium only is left on the resin beads and the process starts all over again.
Our Systems
We offer Water softeners in a variety of sizes, ranging from 32,000 grain capacity to 70,000 grain capacity. All of our systems have up-flow, proportional brining valves meaning they regenerate based off of the amount of water that you use, so you can get the most efficient use out of your water softener, and you'll never have to worry about getting hard water when you get close to a regeneration period like you do with a standard water softener.

Reverse Osmosis Systems
A reverse osmosis system removes sediment and chlorine from water with a pre-filter before it forces water through a semipermeable membrane to remove dissolved solids. After water exits the RO membrane, it passes through a postfilter to polish the drinking water before it enters a dedicated faucet. Reverse Osmosis systems (or RO's) are one of the best ways to get pure, clean water!