On a microscopic level, that lack of lather is due to high concentrations of calcium and magnesium in the water, a condition known as hardness. Water hardness varies by region and affects everything from how clean you feel after a shower, to how sparkly you can get your dishes. It can also leave unsightly residue on shower walls and clog pipes with limescale buildup.
To remove water hardness, you need a water softener.
A water softener is a household appliance used to remove dissolved calcium and magnesium from your entire home's water. Water softeners serve your entire home’s water supply and are located at the point-of-entry.
Certain parts of the country, especially in the Plains and Rockies, have harder water than others, meaning there are more deposits and a greater need for water softeners.
Many people think if you get municipal water, then you don’t need a water softener. It all depends on where your municipality sources the water. If the source has hard water, you will still benefit from a water softener, or at least a water conditioner.
You will need to buy and add salt to the brine tank regularly to keep it working. Tank recharges are typically scheduled to occur during off-hours when water isn’t needed. If you do use water while the water softener is recharging, you’ll still get hard water.
Unlike a water softener, a conditioner uses Potassium Chloride instead of salt, which can be important for people with low-sodium diets. However, a conditioner doesn’t match the removal power of a water softener.
Water softeners and conditioners will not remove toxic metals and bacteria/viruses. For that, you will need a separate water filtration system.
Water softeners come in a wide range of shapes, sizes, and price ranges. The first step in picking the right one is figuring out what size you need.
Water softeners are sized based on how many grains of hard water minerals they can remove between regeneration cycles. If your household has eight people with incredibly hard water, then you will need a larger water softener than a three-person family with moderately hard water.
To estimate your water softener size, figure out the following:
Multiply the two numbers together to arrive at the minimum amount of hardness the water softener would need to remove per day. Sizing slightly above this minimum will keep you on the safe side.
For example, suppose your household uses 300 gallons of water per day, and the water has 10 grains of minerals per gallon. By multiplying the two figures, your water softener would need to be large enough to remove 3,000 grains of hard water per day.
Traditional water softener controls use timers to regulate regeneration. You preset a time and day to regenerate based on your average water usage. Typically, you would set it to renew in the middle of the night when you would have little to no need for soft water.
The downside occurs if you veer from your average water usage. If you use water more quickly than expected, the system won’t regenerate in time, and you’ll be stuck with hard water until the timer goes off. If you use water more slowly than expected, the system will regenerate before it needs to, wasting water and salt.
Smart water softener controls, also known as demand-initiated regeneration (DIR) controls, calculate water usage to decide when to regenerate the system automatically. As such, they are more efficient than timer controls by using water and salt only when necessary.
Other important points to consider when shopping for a water softener include:
As far as water softener system maintenance goes, the main thing you, the consumer, will need to remember is to add salt when the unit dips below one-third full. Use clean, white pellet, cube-style, or solar salt. Do not use rock salt. You can also disinfect the appliance by adding household chlorine bleach into the brine tank and running a manual regeneration cycle. Refer to your owner's manual for details.
Now that you know the basics behind water softeners and what to look for, you’re ready to experience the benefits of softer water on your skin, dishes, and plumbing system. Enjoy that foamy lather every time you shower.