I like mine from Nev at Gryphon. $249 and works like a charm, great little unit.
Sorry I have to ask.
I work as a paramedic and Osmosis is a process we study during training, that being the movement of water from high concentration through a semipermeable membrane to an area of lessser concentration.
How does reverse osmosis play a role in brewing? Just curious.
Sorry I have to ask.
I work as a paramedic and Osmosis is a process we study during training, that being the movement of water from high concentration through a semipermeable membrane to an area of lessser concentration.
How does reverse osmosis play a role in brewing? Just curious.
I f you are getting tap water at 58ppm, then that's bloody beaut. Why use an RO system at all, you just need a sediment and carbon filter. Perth water in my area is 371ppmHe may not even need it for brewing but I have a RO/DI model & it will take my standard tap water with a 58ppm reading & strip it of absolutely everything & giving me a 0ppm reading. It takes out absolutely every chemical & mineral in the tap water resulting in pure as pure water. Not too sure you would need to go to these lengths to brew beer but maybe his water is unusable.
ppm of what? If referring to Calcium then that's fine for most styles. However there could be a lot of crap in there that you don't want in many styles, such as sulphates, carbonates, chlorides, metals, unobtanium etc.
I f you are getting tap water at 58ppm, then that's bloody beaut. Why use an RO system at all, you just need a sediment and carbon filter. Perth water in my area is 371ppm
Enter your email address to join: