The Advantages Of Reverse Osmosis Systems

Reverse osmosis systems are one of the most effective forms of water purification available today. They remove virtually all dissolved mater that may be present in the water leaving it just pure H2O. It is very close to distilled water.

Reverse osmosis filters were developed back in the nineteen fifties by the U.S. government as a way to desalinate water. It worked great for the Navy when men were out to sea for long periods of time. They had fresh water on demand at all times without having to store water on board.

The water purification industry saw an opportunity and started developing a reverse osmosis water filter for home use. They have become a very popular and effective way to deliver good clean pure drinking water to homes for many years. They are virtually fail-safe as long a regular maintenance schedule is followed.

The heart of the reverse osmosis water filter is the reverse osmosis membrane. The raw tap water is forced through this membrane and in the process 99.9% of most contaminates is removed. Were talking highly toxic chemicals like lead, mercury, asbestos, and nitrates. It will also remove hundreds of other toxins that are showing up in municipal drinking water systems.

Reverse osmosis systems usually have more than a membrane to filter the water. In most cases they will have a sediment pre-filter to take out the larger particles like sand and silt. There is also a carbon pre-filter to remove the chlorine, which will damage a TFC reverse osmosis membrane. A lot of times there will also be a post filter that is a carbon block filter. This polishes the water to give it a very refreshing clean taste.

Depending on the type of membrane, a reverse osmosis system can produce from five up to one hundred gallons of pure water a day for your home. Anything larger than this would be quite costly.  Since water has to continually flush the membrane when the pure water is being produced there is wastewater that goes down the drain.

Since the reverse osmosis system produces a limited amount of water per day the water is stored in a pressurized tank, which is usually about three to four gallons in size. You will have a separate faucet at your sink to dispense the filtered water.  They fit nicely under your sink or you can put them in a remote location like a basement of crawl space if you need to. They are very easy to install.

Having a whole house reverse osmosis system would be very costly, take up a lot of room in your home, and waste a large amount of water. So they are used for cooking and drinking water only.

Having a reverse osmosis system  will provide you with clean, pure, healthy, free drinking water right at home for many years to come. So the question begs to asked, is a reverse osmosis system right for you?

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