LoudBlunts
Well-Known Member
my subliminal was missed too
five dollars for the winnAR!!!
five dollars for the winnAR!!!
that makes me feel better........i think i spent too much time with sparkafire going back and forth, so now it just "happens". i'mma go over to the corner and hush.
go for it guysthat makes me feel better........i think i spent too much time with sparkafire going back and forth, so now it just "happens". i'mma go over to the corner and hush.
Sorry for the long post and apparently complex post but I put it as simple as possible and gave the technical backup too. I was a hippy in the 70s went to college so I can cifer now.go for it guys
no bro, your golden. i got it. and it was a great post. i was just messin around. thought the techno serious chatting could do with a lil bump in the road for good measure is all.Sorry for the long post and apparently complex post but I put it as simple as possible and gave the technical backup too. I was a hippy in the 70s went to college so I can cifer now.
wow, i feel like i just took a college course, thats a lot of great info greenthumb, i love coming to this thread and learning shit all the time.Ok let me take a crack at this pH issue.
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]In RO systems you have the feed water (input to the system) and the permeate (after filtering). When your water passes through the RO system you filter out ions (CO3 and HCO3) but not the CO2 which is a gas. This filtering will change the equilibrium of the water because 2 of the ions which control the reaction which produces the hydrogen ion (H+) were removed in the RO process. The H+ ion is what the pH meter is measuring The new equilibrium will always result in a lowering of permeate pHif there is CO2 gas present in the feed water. [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Usually, the pH drop is largest for waters with high amounts of alkalinity or HCO3. [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]When there is very little CO2, HCO3, or CO3, there is very little pH drop observed in the permeate.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Therefore it is not true that reverse osmosis filters will always reduce the pH level of water to a noticeable amount. The pH difference after the RO depends on the composition of your input water source; depends on whether you have large amounts of gases such as CO2 in your local water supply. [/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]If you are concerned with the pH of your RO water (If you see that your pH is indeed below 7 with a good amount), you can consider putting a pH increaser filter as a final stage of your reverse osmosis system and correct acid water problem easily.[/FONT]
You meters are working its just the water that has changed post RO. Hope this helps
install a contactor or a suppressor on your main hot line, that will surge protect yasog. i am running a 1000w light 220 v whats a good surge protector i could get for it.
ill try to maintain both,nice looking so far.......u gonna be posting in riu or stinkbuddies.com?
did i?not sure i under stand. u said they will work if im not in a stormy region
this can be done with every postsog can u tell me how to take one of your post and put it in a different thead