rick rottet
reefkeeper// propagator
Thanks for your kind words, interest, and for the link.
Hmmm.... It would definitely remove the amount of iron I have in the water. It looks like that one works on an ion exchange principle (unless I am totally misreading it). The "greensand" media is charged/recharged by potassium permanganate- which gets exchanged for Fe. Works on the same principle as a household water softener but uses potassium salts instead of sodium salts.
I have talked with a few suppliers about softeners. This is one avenue that might work, but I think requires more work and maintenance. My experience with our household water softener is that they can tend to "run out" of their charge on a day when larger quantities of water pass through them. Then we either get unsoftened water or the unit has to be recharged manually (if you happen to notice that it has depleted it's capacity). They also need to be filled with the salt- extra purchases, then transporting and lugging big bags of salt down the cellar stairs. They need to be acid cleaned and sanitized at certain intervals as well. Plus I still get the same stains on my prefilters of the RO unit that is under the kitchen sink. That membrane has been in place for nearly three years, but it is only a 50 gpd unit that at most runs 25 gallons in a week.
The iron removal systems I have been discussing with suppliers use an aspiration valve to inject air into the water, turning it to rust, then filtering it out also with media. They require no charging/recharging. They backflush every night automatically. They are really supposed to be plug-n-play/ set it and forget it. Cost is more than double of the one you showed me though. They are also supposed to take care of the "iron bacteria" which makes the orange gunk so thick and gooey.
I did consider using the vat like Treeman suggested, but I think it might be limiting as far as the amount of space/time I have.
I don't think this issue is going to get resolved in the immediate future. It will probably be a few weeks before I decide on a purchase since IMAC is this weekend (where maybe I can get some input about solutions) and then I have some family plans the week following.
Hmmm.... It would definitely remove the amount of iron I have in the water. It looks like that one works on an ion exchange principle (unless I am totally misreading it). The "greensand" media is charged/recharged by potassium permanganate- which gets exchanged for Fe. Works on the same principle as a household water softener but uses potassium salts instead of sodium salts.
I have talked with a few suppliers about softeners. This is one avenue that might work, but I think requires more work and maintenance. My experience with our household water softener is that they can tend to "run out" of their charge on a day when larger quantities of water pass through them. Then we either get unsoftened water or the unit has to be recharged manually (if you happen to notice that it has depleted it's capacity). They also need to be filled with the salt- extra purchases, then transporting and lugging big bags of salt down the cellar stairs. They need to be acid cleaned and sanitized at certain intervals as well. Plus I still get the same stains on my prefilters of the RO unit that is under the kitchen sink. That membrane has been in place for nearly three years, but it is only a 50 gpd unit that at most runs 25 gallons in a week.
The iron removal systems I have been discussing with suppliers use an aspiration valve to inject air into the water, turning it to rust, then filtering it out also with media. They require no charging/recharging. They backflush every night automatically. They are really supposed to be plug-n-play/ set it and forget it. Cost is more than double of the one you showed me though. They are also supposed to take care of the "iron bacteria" which makes the orange gunk so thick and gooey.
I did consider using the vat like Treeman suggested, but I think it might be limiting as far as the amount of space/time I have.
I don't think this issue is going to get resolved in the immediate future. It will probably be a few weeks before I decide on a purchase since IMAC is this weekend (where maybe I can get some input about solutions) and then I have some family plans the week following.