MEP001
Well-known member
Then you will always have hard water before it regenerates. That's how it has to work unless you oversize the softener and regenerate it before it's giving hard water. So with a single tank, you either ALWAYS have to oversize, or you ALWAYS have to let it run hard, or you ALWAYS have to regenerate early. The only exception would be if you're softening only the RO system, in which case you could regenerate the softener at the proper capacity as needed and use a pretreatment interlock to stop the RO system from running.A single tank does not use or waste salt compared to a twin tank. Period.
Single head twin tank softeners do use water from one tank to regenerate the other side, but when you're talking numbers anywhere near 60 GPM you have to have separate softeners linked with a common meter, and those don't use soft water from one tank to regenerate the other....when a twin tank switches over to the other one it uses softened water to regen. It gets that from the tank in use. So if you need a 60 gpm flow, you need around a 80 gpm tank to supply the wash and regen the other tank.