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    Whole house water filters???

    The plumbing contractor for our new house (still being built) strongly recommends a whole house water filter, to block silt and crap from the 600-ft. water well from getting into the house's water system, valves, etc. He said one of those $75 filters at Home Depot would be fine, and should have a minimum of 20 gpm. He said 20 gpm was pushing it: we could just do one thing at a time, like one person taking a shower.

    Welp.... turns out 20 gpm is the MOST I can find. That's about $70, with a 30 micron filter. It has a 1" connector, but the actual water feed inside the device is just 1/4". I can't believe it delivers 20 gpm through that tiny hole. Yet reviewers say "hey I have a wife and 3 kids and it works great!!!"

    Many comparable filters just produce 10-15 gpm, or even less.

    The real expensive, top line filters that cost several thousand dollars go down to 5 - 10 microns, but only produce 4 or 5 gpm!!! I mean, jeez, are those even usable? Yet, many of these get 5-star reviews; nobody ever mentions not having enough water flow.

    I feel like there's something I'm missing here. Can anybody school me on this? I need to buy one pretty soon.

    #2
    I just had an automatic back flushing filter system installed on our place in Centerville. It was $1850 installed but it has made a world of difference so far.


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      #3
      20 gpm is a lot of water. I would recommend that you have it downstream of your faucets or at least have one faucet on the upstream side so that you can fill a swimming pool or wash cars without dealing worth the restriction.

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        #4
        Originally posted by Jon B View Post
        20 gpm is a lot of water. I would recommend that you have it downstream of your faucets or at least have one faucet on the upstream side so that you can fill a swimming pool or wash cars without dealing worth the restriction.
        I wouldn’t put any exterior faucets on it. Have them all separate from your homes water.

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          #5
          Just pulled a table off of the web. Regardless of whether you use pex or copper you shouldn't really see a drop unless two large items are running at once...most sinks, shower heads are rated for much less than 2 gpm....now if the filter isn't kept clean it may cause a restriction. I have attached the table.

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            #6
            Great chart, thanks! I had a feeling his "minimum 20 gpm" was what was off.

            I'll check on the exterior faucets.

            What about the micron specs? The best are 5 microns, but do you really need it that tight just to keep the silt out?

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              #7
              Whole house water filters???

              You will get tired of replacing filters. I bought this unit and it solved my silt problems. Programable to clean itself at regular intervals.

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                #8
                IN....

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                  #9
                  Go to reverseosmosis.com that is who I bought my water softner and filter through. I think you will find them much cheaper and they are very knowledgeable. My filters are less than $30 and work great.

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