Junkyard Dog
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #31
So I continued researching. As a reminder, posted in December, I am on a well. Very hard water.
I found recently this bottle refilling station.
https://www.water.com/services/primo-water-refill/
I don't know the cost, yet, but you can fill a 5 gallon jug there.
AI on google tells me this about it:
So dumped into a 5 gallon bucket and applied with an electric pressure washer with soap as a foam and then used for clean rinse . . . should it get rid of my hard water spotting issue on my beautiful blue ember metallic paint (and matte black stripes on hood)?
I found recently this bottle refilling station.
https://www.water.com/services/primo-water-refill/
I don't know the cost, yet, but you can fill a 5 gallon jug there.
AI on google tells me this about it:
Water from Primo refillable machines (including outdoor stations) is highly purified using reverse osmosis. It has a Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) level of less than
The machine purifies local municipal water and does not add minerals back to the refill water.
, making it a virtual blank slate free of most minerals, heavy metals, and salts. Reddit·r/Homebrewing +2
BeerSmith
- Total Dissolved Solids (TDS):
- Minerals (Calcium, Magnesium, Potassium, etc.): Traces are generally undetectable
- pH Level: Neutral (around 7.0)
Reddit·r/Homebrewing +1
BeerSmith +1
Could you tell me what you plan to use this water for (e.g., general drinking, brewing coffee/tea, or filling an aquarium)? I can help determine if this purified profile fits your needs or if you should consider adding minerals back.
So dumped into a 5 gallon bucket and applied with an electric pressure washer with soap as a foam and then used for clean rinse . . . should it get rid of my hard water spotting issue on my beautiful blue ember metallic paint (and matte black stripes on hood)?
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