water . treatment

    Water treatment occurs in a number of ways and is dependant on:

      • what is in the water; and
      • what outcome is needed following the treatment.

      treatment can occur by:
        Chemical treatment
      • chemically treating the water using alkalines and acids for pH balancing, coagulants and dispersors for capturing suspended solids and non-degradables and chlorination to kill off bugs that may be in the water system;
        Non Chemical approach:
      • filters, such as activated carbon, and woven polypropolene with fine micron level of screening, can take the beneficial things in the water just as it might take out the bad things in the water;
      • osmosis filtering is reliant on high pressure, oxygen infusion and passing fine molecules through membrane systems however the viability for domestic use is limited;
      • conditioning, being a non chemical process that adds nothing and takes nothing away, however by the supply of electrons using the electrolites in whatever weater is used, modifies the molecular structure producing pure elements as beneficial minerals, nutriemnts and ions to positively charge the water so your water is as healthy as it can be. The tangible outcomes being the optimised water with natural algacide, bacticide and fungacide, reducing the surface tention of water, reducing hardness and even eliminating chlorine taste to deliver the natural optimised benefits to the water you use.

      domestic water treatment
      • natural . is best;
        • conditioning . systems are a non chemical treatment that optimise the water to a natural and healthy state;
        • cartridge filters. using a range of media to filter / remove particles and or bacteria from the water.