I prefer the taste of hard water for drinking, but love soft water for not having to keep descaling stuff or having to use a filter
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Hard/Soft water
Collapse
X
-
We have to replace our electric shower every couple of years, it gets limed up so badly that it can fire the top off the showerhead! We have one of those plugged-in magnetic water softeners which helps a bit, but not enough. Currently our shower is down to a pathetic dribble.
Interesting question about water absorbtion by plants though Wayne. I feel an experiment coming on.
Comment
-
Not all of sheffields water is soft. I live in north sheffield and my water is quite hard and it tastes awful. It kills our kettles and we have to replace them about twice a year and we have to use water softener in our washing machine and dish washer or the scale can get so bad that they seize up.
In the last 10 and a bit years that Ive lived here Ive had to have 4 new washing machines 3 new dishwashers and over 20 new kettles.
I wouldnt dare use our tap water for any sensitive plants. I try to use my waterbut as often as I can
Comment
-
Originally posted by Pumpkin Becki View PostWe have to replace our electric shower every couple of years, it gets limed up so badly that it can fire the top off the showerhead! We have one of those plugged-in magnetic water softeners which helps a bit, but not enough. Currently our shower is down to a pathetic dribble.
Interesting question about water absorbtion by plants though Wayne. I feel an experiment coming on.
Comment
-
Originally posted by zazen999 View PostI used to take the head off and soak in limescale kettle remover stuff, it's the holes that get clagged up and doing that sorts them out.
Comment
-
Get a water softener installed on your incoming water. £200ish I think and then just some salt every now and then, which is very cheap.
You usually leave the kitchen tap hard for drinking and everything else gets nice soft water.
You can use vinegar to descale things too. Cheaper and probably greener too I would have thought.Last edited by BFG; 17-01-2010, 12:38 PM.
Comment
-
-
We have awfully scaly water down here too.
My old gran used boil vinegar and water in the kettle to remove limescale - you have to do it a few times, and obviously rinse it out before using it again I also dip the shower head in warm water/vinegar solution over night and it does remove quite a lot of limescale. Its also cheaper to buy a bottle of malt vinegar (about 30p) whereas proper limescale remover cost far more!
Last edited by northepaul; 17-01-2010, 12:43 PM.
Comment
-
Sutton water soften all their water so while Bromley and Croydon have some of the hardest water around - barring Ashford - we are lucky and don't have as much of a problem - or as much scum on the tea!The weeks and the years are fine. It's the days I can't cope with!
Comment
-
I grew up in the Thames Valley hard water area. I still have problems with using too much soap when in a soft water area.
We have a water softening thingy for the water going into the Combi boiler, but it is supposed to be replenished ever year or so, and doesn't get done often enough.
Not all hard water is 'boilable' (different types of limestone), but it always comes out as scum when you use soap!Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.
Comment
-
I have lived in Somerset for over 25 years now and have never had to descale a kettle and this is the first new one that I have had to buy in that time. Only trouble we have is that visitors forget how soft it is and use far too much shampoo/washingup liquid etc. It takes forever to get rid of the bubbles!
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment