Water Softener Salty Drinking Water
Another option is a reverse osmosis drinking water system installed along with your water softener.
Water softener salty drinking water. Click to enlarge any image or table. Salt or sodium is added to water softeners to enable a process that works by exchanging sodium for the minerals on the resin bed. Reverse osmosis removes 95 of everything in the water including sodium. Failure to add salt generally makes the water softener less effective over time and its ability to remove minerals diminishes to the point where it stops working after the salt in the resin gets depleted.
A properly adjusted water softener puts about 8 mg of salt sodium or nacl in each liter of treated water for each grain of hardness removed. If you are experiencing a salty taste in your water it could often mean that the injector on your water softener is clogged or there is some restriction or kink within the brine line or the drain line flow control. The water softener adds water to the salt to dissolve a portion of the salt and then it uses the salty water to remove hard minerals from the water softening resin that it uses to remove hardness in your water. Most of the time this regeneration cycle occurs between 2 a m.
A couple times a week. A properly installed and functional water softener will not make your water taste salty. Water at 10 grains of hardness which has been processed by a water softener will have 80 mg of salt l.