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Water softener vs Conditioner

476 Views | 4 Replies | Last: 4 days ago by rme
Scriffer
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AG
We just moved to a neighborhood in southwest Plano that has really hard water. When we moved in, the tub faucets were all insanely corroded.

I just had a plumber come out to quote on a softener, and he mentioned he has a conditioner at his house. It's the Halo 5 system which apparently removes / neutralizes chemicals and deionizes the minerals, so they don't adhere and build up in your fixtures. Pretty mixed reviews in Googling.

Sounds like marketing / sales BS to me, but given my layout and placement, a full softener in the garage would be totally cost prohibitive. My garage is on the far corner of the house from the main, would need a new drain run, plus power, etc.

Would a conditioner be a waste of money if my primary goal is really just to reduce scaling?

Edit: I'm not married to the Halo as a conditioner. Just need something to reduce scaling
dudeabides
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AG
One alternative to consider is a filter system that adds polyphoshates to the water. Polyphosphates bind with calcium and magnesium ions to help reduce scale buildup. Much easier system to install and maintain.... but it won't reduce Ca ions like a salt-based softer system will. It is just something different which might work for your situation/application.

Here's an example: Link


BrazosDog02
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AG
I'll say it….i feel like conditioners are snake oil. I've never been able to find actual science on how they work and no manufacturer has ever given me a seriously legitimate answer that I can say "ok, that makes sense." It's alway proprietary info. Every time this question comes up, I have to google it just to see and every time I still don't feel like I have a real answer. I might be way off base and I'm getting older and a bit set in my ways, but an CHEM 101 student can tell you how my water softener works with ion exchange and probably show up on paper with the formula.

I Was always told a conditioner "alters" the problem chemistry somehow. Softeners remove it.
AGpops1923
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Ask him for an in home demo and hard water test. At his house of course
rme
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AG
I'm in SW Plano too.
Call Roger at DFW Water Softeners at 469-679-1788.
He repaired my softener valve and we talked quite a bit about systems.
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