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Hard Water
Water described as "hard" is high in dissolved minerals, specifically
calcium and magnesium. Hard water is not a health risk, but a nuisance
because of mineral buildup on fixtures and poor soap and/or detergent
performance.
As water moves through soil and rock, it dissolves very small amounts of
minerals and holds them in solution. Calcium and magnesium dissolved in
water are the two most common minerals that make water "hard."
Hard Water Problems
Clothes washed in hard water often look dingy and feel harsh and scratchy.
Bathing, with soap in hard water leaves a film of sticky soap curd on the
skin. Hard water also contributes to inefficient and costly operation of
water using appliances. Heated hard water forms a scale of calcium and
magnesium minerals (limescale deposits) that can contribute to the
inefficient operation or failure of water-using appliances. Pipes can become
clogged with scale that reduces water flow.
Solar heating, often used for heating swimming pools is prone to limescale
buildup, which can reduce the efficiency of the electronic pump and
therefore the overall systems performance will deteriorate.
Hard water is not a health hazard. In fact, the National Research Council
(National Academy of Sciences) states that hard drinking water generally
contributes a small amount toward total calcium and magnesium human dietary
needs. The ideal solution would be to leave the calcium in the water, but
alter its state so that it couldn't form limescale. This is what magnetic
water conditioners do.
Water
Purification Hard
Water Testing
Softeners Filters |