I don't quite agree. On high pressure soap if you use hard water the show is much worse than with soft water - even with the soap is diluted with soft water.A common misconception is that so many washes plumb freaking everything with soft water. Just use it for mixing chemicals and the RO. You're wasting it, and using a LOT of salt, to use it for high pressure functions.
I was waiting for you to finally answer the questions of how many bays and whether you had an auto before I could give you a proper answer.Can someone tell me what size water softener I would need. Im new to this and do not know how many gallons per day I would need.
I have 4 ss bays and 1 RO system. I know there are alot of variables but right now I have know idea what I need.
If your water is very hard, scale will build up in the plumbing and pumps if everything (especially hot water) isn't softened. Maintenance costs and potential downtime/equipment failure is increased because of that.A common misconception is that so many washes plumb freaking everything with soft water. Just use it for mixing chemicals and the RO. You're wasting it, and using a LOT of salt, to use it for high pressure functions.
I do have a IBA. I'm going to build a separate pump room for my IBA. If I did add the IBA to this water softener what size would i need?I was waiting for you to finally answer the questions of how many bays and whether you had an auto before I could give you a proper answer.
Your peak water flow will be under 20 GPM. I'd recommend a minimum of 2 cu.ft, typically 12" x 48" tank with a 1" meter.
I highly recommend a dual setup like a Fleck 9000. There's less waste and no chance of running hard water when the capacity is reached.
Is this the one you are talking about? http://www.qualitywatertreatment.co...edTwinDemand64KGrainCapacity-idv-1017-20.htmlI was waiting for you to finally answer the questions of how many bays and whether you had an auto before I could give you a proper answer.
Your peak water flow will be under 20 GPM. I'd recommend a minimum of 2 cu.ft, typically 12" x 48" tank with a 1" meter.
I highly recommend a dual setup like a Fleck 9000. There's less waste and no chance of running hard water when the capacity is reached.