firstimegrower1
New Member
What is RO water, I know it stands for reverse osmosis but what is it really? What is the benefit and how is it different then normal water
so how is it different then distilled waterReverse Osmosis is almost pure water no junk.
so how is it different then distilled water
thanks dickheadWhy waste time making a thread where people can give you wrong answers? Lol ro water is special water i have pissed in. See. You were way better of going to google.
Smoke a j......look at it from the outside, it was pretty funny.thanks dickhead
distilled water that you buy off the shelf usually has a ppm of 30-45. it's not as pure as r/o water.
get a ppm meter and a jug of distilled water then come talk to me. not even close. a good residential r/o filter will reduce your water to about 10% of what it was. so if you have 150ppm water then you will end up with 15ppm. a pre-filter will reduce that even further.Nope, distilled water is the gold standard of pure water.
RO units are used to save money over distilled. Distilled is more expensive, but slightly more pure.
maybe you should buy a dictionary..."almost" and "close to" aren't the same as "is". learn how to read first.OP, you deserve what you get by being too lazy to do a proper search. The 2 morons who think RO = ZERO ppm are fine examples
get a ppm meter and a jug of distilled water then come talk to me. not even close. a good residential r/o filter will reduce your water to about 10% of what it was. so if you have 150ppm water then you will end up with 15ppm. a pre-filter will reduce that even further.
maybe you should buy a dictionary..."almost" and "close to" aren't the same as "is". learn how to read first.
depends on what that 140 or 250ppm consists of. i'd love to know exactly what is in the 150ppm in my water but down here the water company doesn't tell you. so, to be safe i just filter it anyway. plus, i drink r/o water. a line goes to the ice makers and i fill up 5 gallon bottles for the water cooler with it. if you have the concentration reading from a municipal water company then you can adjust for any deficiencies or abundances. you may also find that your water contains something you don't want your plants drinking so you may want to filter it anyway. the pre-filter on my unit takes out chlorine and fluorides which i don't want my plants getting and saves me from having to let my water sit overnight or aerate to dissipate the chlorine.... don't need r/o water if your tap is 140 or even 250. R/O water isn't really necessary if you don't have ridiculous hardness or well water which is high in minerals. The same stuff you are removing using to is some if the same stuff you end up putting back in. If you have good tap water save money and use that. A fool will find a million ways to over complicate an other wise easy thing.
ETA almost all water companies gave reports on the water quality. If it's not posted on their website, call and ask I'm sure you can get your hands on it.
That's true regarding what the numbers consist of, but if I'm not mistaken water companies have to publish these reports, so the information should be available. The amounts of chlorine and fluoride are negligible and are not harmful to the plants in the amounts available. Plus most things in the composition of 140-250 are small ranges of things plants actually like such as calcium, magnesium and other trace minerals. There are many more sensitive issues to deal with before blaming the water source.depends on what that 140 or 250ppm consists of. i'd love to know exactly what is in the 150ppm in my water but down here the water company doesn't tell you. so, to be safe i just filter it anyway. plus, i drink r/o water. a line goes to the ice makers and i fill up 5 gallon bottles for the water cooler with it. if you have the concentration reading from a municipal water company then you can adjust for any deficiencies or abundances. you may also find that your water contains something you don't want your plants drinking so you may want to filter it anyway. the pre-filter on my unit takes out chlorine and fluorides which i don't want my plants getting and saves me from having to let my water sit overnight or aerate to dissipate the chlorine.
i live in Costa Rica most of the year. down here they don't publish the mineral concentrations of the water. depending on where you live sometimes the chlorine can be an issue in the water; especially in arizona and new mexico from what i hear.That's true regarding what the numbers consist of, but if I'm not mistaken water companies have to publish these reports, so the information should be available. The amounts of chlorine and fluoride are negligible and are not harmful to the plants in the amounts available. Plus most things in the composition of 140-250 are small ranges of things plants actually like such as calcium, magnesium and other trace minerals. There are many more sensitive issues to deal with before blaming the water source.