Kinetico water filters

kinetico water filters or more likely to be found as the Kinetico Drinking Water System Plus,
is the best water softener, as for quotes the Consumers Digest, and was referred to as the Best
System, like stated by some of the top leading consumer magazines in the country.

On television it was shown Also and was installed on some of the top household programs who
gave their opinion on this (programs like “This Old House”, “Hometime” and “Home Again with Bob
Villa”. The Queen of Clean™ ).
They all gave Kinetico systems their official Seal of Approval.

Even www.treehugger.com, known as one of the leading environmental websites, recommended
The Kinetico non-electric water softeners. The new Drinking Water System has been also featured
in Woman’s Day, Better Homes & Gardens, Life Beautiful, and the Wall Street Journal.

To begin with the reason Kinetico receives all of the attention,it is best to check our
philosophy of producing the highest quality and of the lowest maintenance water purification
products that are available.

Kinetico has been engineering water treatment Since 1970. The products are innovative, user
friendly and responsive to the always changing demands of customers in the United State of
America and in over 100 countries.

Kinetico provides many types of water filtration systems and purification ones.
That includes drinking water purification systems, called Point of Use systems, and Point of
Entry water filters that treat all water before it is distributed throughout the consumers
private residence or office.

Kinetico whole house filters dutifully stand guard against problematic elements that are common,
like iron, chlorine and suspended solids that makes water appear dirty or cloudy.
The filters are customized to the clients unique water needs.

The Kinetico Water Filters includes in them: Macrolite, Carbon, Calcite, Sulfur Guard, Arsenic
Guard, Dechlorinator, Aerator and the Neutralizer.

Kinetico whole house filters are customized to your home’s or office and private business unique
water needs.

The exclusive ceramic filters, developed in conjunction with 3M, screens oxidized iron,
particulate matter and other contaminants down to five microns

The Carbon Removes chlorine and objectionable odors for fresher water
The Calcite Raises pH to neutralize water and eliminate acid water problems

In conclusion, it is highly recommended for all water use and will meet your needs.

We have a well that produces good water, but at different times of the year, the water becomes cloudy, brown, etc. The well is nowhere near the septic tank, of course, so any filtering system that contains a backflush process is out of the question…nowhere for the waste water to go.

The system has a pressure pump (set to 55 PSI) and a large accumulator tank. From there, the 2" pipe goes to irrigation and to the house. I know I’ll have to re-plumb most of that to separate the outside from the house water. What kind of filter do I need? There are only 2 of us, so our use isn’t huge. I just want to keep the discoloration and scale down. This is Oregon and the water is fairly good. We will continue to use either Brita or a filter for the drinking water. There seems to be a very wide range of products from to well over 00. I just want to find something that works. Not sure if I need to worry about UV??? Thanks
I’ve used Culligan elsewhere. Overpriced to say the least, but that system requires backflush…where the flushing water must go into a septic tank/sewer…which is not accessible.

County doesn’t provide a testing service here…
The output of the pump and accumulator goes directly into the concrete of the well-house. Two pipes…one for irrigation and one for the house. They are connected with no backflow device as they are inside the building. Pipe now goes to a valve then Ts to the house line (in concrete) and to a 2nd valve that Ts to the irrigation line (in concrete) and to a faucet attached to the outside.

I need to re-plumb so I have more control (to turn off house but leave on irrigation, etc), and I can figure that out…but where and how and what sort of backflush relief can I get…and I don’t want the released water to fall inside the wellhouse. Any links to what I need to buy/do? Thanks…backflush is clearly a concern now..

whats the best water filter, systems like brita or anything else. im planning to get 3 a pitcher filter a fridge filter and a faucet filter. i want something that taste similar to aquafina, dasini, or fresh and easy water.

I used to think that the blue faucet gave cold water, and the white one was room temperature water – but I just started a job where they have a culligan cooler and the water from the white nozzle seems to be just as cold as water from the blue nozzle…

well you know that drinking water filter in the kitchen sink next to the standard faucet? i dont know why, but water wont come out. it worked in the morning but when i came home in the evening and tried to get a drink of water, nothing came out. the regular faucet next to it still works fine. i checked under the sink but no pipe/tube seems to be out of place. what could be wrong? i dont want to hire an expensive profesional….

Our new tenants recently changed the filter, didn’t help. The problem tap is in an upstairs master bath. They say this is the only faucet in the whole house with this problem. We lived in the house 4 yrs, never had any problems w/water. It’s a sandpoint well. House is in interior Alaska, built in 1999.

The system they sell in Sav-On and stores like that all show the filter fitting over a typical kitching sink faucet. Does an adapter or something exist for use in a bathroom?

Our 13 month old son keeps turning on the cold water on our water cooler (the hot has a childproof faucet on it, thankfully.) I can’t seem to find any way to childproof the cold or block it off from his little hands.

I am looking for a water filter to put on my sink faucet. Does anyone know what filter is the best for removing chemicals, especially chlorine and flouride?

I just moved into an apartment and the water is awful. When it first comes from the faucet, it tastes fine but smells like metal or rust, but then after leaving it out for a while, it tastes metallic. Would getting a faucet or water pitcher filter give me safe drinking water? Should I start buying bottled water instead of a filter?
This is in Richardson, TX

I have hard water with lots of iron in it. We have a water softener to combat this. If we didn’t have the softener, our water would be orange coming out of our faucets. It’s not that good to be drinking water with the softener salt in it, especially now that I’m pregnant. What would be the best water filter for me? Should I get one that attaches to the faucet or a pitcher with a filter?