Water

meowzer

Moderator
NO, you want ro water....or purified bottled water
 
you can also buy the water from the machines at Walmart
 

meowzer

Moderator
ro= reverse osmosis
 
you can also buy it bottled, or as I said from those machines that Walmarts and some other stores have
 
 

posiden

Active Member
Ok, I'll be the bad person.........
 
Lots of distilled water states right on the container that it is purified by either distillation or RO.
 

posiden

Active Member
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by meowzer http:///forum/thread/379664/water#post_3300735
 
 
so what are you saying
 
 
That buying distilled water is ok IMO. Its not too far from buying the RO out of the machine. No one knows when the filter were changed in those water units or just what they are putting out. Well, short of buying a hand held TDS meter and testing it when you got home or when its coming out of the machine. I used store bought distilled water for a long time before I caved in and bought an RO/DI untit.
 
 

btldreef

Moderator
You just have to read what it actually is, but like Poseiden said, most distilled water is infact RO water.
 

posiden

Active Member
Quote:
Originally Posted by BTLDreef http:///forum/thread/379664/water#post_3300754
You just have to read what it actually is, but like Poseiden said, most distilled water is infact RO water.
 
Funny, You spelled my name like I should have. I should have checked it before I made my account.
 
 
Sorry, I had too. I've had a few......
 

navigator

Member
I'm new to the hobby, but I know a bit about water treatment thanks to my day job. Here are several fairly concise articles about water purification methods (all fairly well written for wikipedia):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purified_water
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_osmosis
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distilled_water
Distillation and reverse osmosis are two methods of purifying water, with the resulting product water being similarly low in dissolved solids (i.e. salts, such as calcium or nitrate). That is, the two products are essentially the same. However, distilled water has certain requirements which must be met in order to qualify as 'distilled.' In other words, water can be 'purified' by RO and not qualify as 'distilled.' But again, unless you are performing chemistry, the difference is too slight to worry about. Always mix your seawater according to specifications, and allow time for dissolution of salt and gas exchange.
 
However, just to scare you with some theoretical points: There can be lingering problems with either method if not performed thoroughly. For example, if carbon is not appropriately used before either RO filtration or distillation, salts will be removed but certain chemicals can survive (e.g. chlorine in RO systems is not removed by the membrane, and chloramines can survive the boiling process in true distillation - either chemical is bad news for our tanks!). Also, most non-municipal RO treatment units do not employ a UV or ozone step, which disinfects the product water of various microbes. That said - there is very little risk that the stuff you buy is improperly purified, and it becomes silly to worry about minor risks. Just be aware. I still like to test my source water before I mix any salt.
 
/Soapbox
High-quality in-home RO systems include a relatively coarse sediment filtration step, a carbon pre-filter to protect the membrane, the 'RO' membrane itself, and a carbon post-filtration step to further reduce chemical constituents. Without the carbon steps, large-molecule salts might be removed while chemicals like chlorine remain. Don't skimp on quality. Having the RO unit in your home means that you have control over the filter maintenance and eliminates doubt as to whether ALL appropriate steps (carbon, membrane specs, etc.) are included in your system.
/Soapbox off
 
I hope some folks out there find this useful. If not, forgive my wordiness! =)
 

bang guy

Moderator
I don't see anything wrong with using distilled water. I would caution that most of the containers of distilled water I have tested with my TDS meter scored poorly.
 

pezenfuego

Active Member
I think we (as hobbyists) sometimes make crap up and spread it around to justify our buying decisions. For most people, ro/di is more practical, but that doesn't mean that it's better. If I didn't have a unit, I would buy whichever is cheapest.
 

geoj

Active Member
It is grate to see that we all have come so far, years ago on this site I had to defend my use of distilled water. Its good to see people able to test, think, and learn for them selves.
 

lol

Member
I would buy whatever is cheapest until I got an RO/DI unit...
 
Though, distilled water is SOMETIMES distilled with copper pipes, and may have some measure of copper in truely distilled water. But, it's probably not even enough to worry about.
 
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