Monday, March 30th, 2020 by Brad Haskin
We are asked this question every day by homeowners that lived with city water their entire lives and purchased a new home that has either a private well or community well water supply. No need to panic! It will be OK. I always joke that all they need is a water treatment 101 class and they will be ready for living with well water. Maybe I am a little biased, being in the water treatment industry, but I’ve always believed we have a lot more control of the quality of our water with well water than you ever would with city water. With every home that has a well, water testing is done as part of the real estate transaction to determine several things regarding the water.
Water chemistry from every well can vary greatly. One well may have a high iron content, hydrogen sulfide, and be extremely high in hardness while the well next door may be the same depth but the water may have very little iron but high hardness.
Below is a chart that shows hardness levels in water and the degrees to which they can cause problems.
Most of the well water we test in Livingston County, MI will have hard water levels (calcium and magnesium) from 10 to 30 plus grains per gallon of hardness
Recently we installed a new water treatment system for a customer in Brighton Michigan that purchased a new home with a private well supply. They had never been on well water before so part of the water evaluation is showing them the problems hard water scale can cause over the short term and long term if left untreated. Although they mentioned the problems were very evident even though they had only been in the home for one month.
Water test: Hardness 26 gpg, Iron 0ppm, PH 7.4, MG 0ppm, H2S 0ppm, AS 0ppb. 3 people in the home with one more on the way!
When sizing water treatment systems for a home there are many parameters that need to be taken into consideration for the system to work properly and provide twenty plus years of reliable service.
There are many different options for water treatment equipment but only ONE is the best, most efficient option. For this household, it was an Evolve Series EVRS 45k capacity water softener
There is a common misconception that water softeners (water treatment equipment) only last 10 years or so. If the proper water treatment system is installed the first time it should last 20-30 years.
No need to fear your water! It can be the best water you will ever have, with very little maintenance, and provide you the quality of water your family deserves and expects for many years.
Good day and good water to you!