Thread: Soft Water
View Single Post
  #14 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
--Bryan --Bryan is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 475
Default Soft Water

On Jan 12, 1:23*pm, brooklyn1 > wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 07:54:37 -0800 (PST), Nancy2
>
>
>
>
>
> > wrote:
> >On Jan 10, 1:51*pm, Mark Thorson > wrote:
> >> I'm watching Ask This Old House, and they're replacing
> >> a water softener. *Actually, they're using the old tank
> >> but replacing the head and the resin beads. *As they were
> >> dumping out the old beads, there was all this black muck
> >> at the bottom of the tank. *They didn't comment on that.
> >> I'd hate to think of my drinking water passing through
> >> that crap.

>
> >> When I was a kid, a friend of mine across the street
> >> had a water softener at his house. *I always thought
> >> the water tasted terrible over there. *Borderline
> >> undrinkable.

>
> >You're not supposed to drink soft water - usually, the setup excludes
> >the kitchen/cold water from the soft water system. *Soft water is best
> >for laundry, bathing, washing hair, etc. *Drinking it is not the
> >recommended usage -

>
> Horsepucky. *Water softeners do not add salt to water


Of course they do. You must be thinking of reverse osmosis filters,
not water softeners. They exchange sodium for calcium and magnesium.
It was my job to fill the salt tank at the resort I worked at.

--Bryan