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Water is something we use without a second thought. We turn on the tap to fill a glass, start the dishwasher, or get in the shower, assuming what flows out is “good enough.” But in cities like Phoenix and across the country, water quality can vary significantly. And that’s where the right water treatment system can make a real difference. Paul Kaplan of Water Treatment Technologies explains how those technologies work for better water.
Broadcast archive page with expanded content
We're here every Saturday morning to do whatever we can to become your best friend, about your favorite topic, you and your house.
We're here every Saturday morning to do whatever we can to become your best friend, about your favorite topic.
You and your house.
Whatever you're thinking about doing, remodeling, maintaining, repairing, or replacing at your house, home, castle, or cabin, you need to start by touching base with us here at Rosie on the house.
We've been building and remodeling Arizona homes since the 70s will give you all of our experience, all of our tricks of the trade and all of our tips for absolutely free.
We don't start anything without checking with us first.
And you can do that this morning by dialing 1-888-767-4348.
That will put you toll-free in touch with my wife, Sweet Jennifer, who will get your name, your location, your question, and we'll get you on air.
We should on air and answered as quick as we can.
I'm here every morning with my eldest son, Romi, who sits over on the important driver's seat of the studio because they don't like me around all the knobs and the dials.
And then we've got our program engineer, Mr. Gary D. as well, beaming the signal exactly at the right satellite so it can come down into your room, into your house, into your car, precisely on time.
All of that is taking place right now for one reason, you, the Arizona homeowner.
We just finished a great conversation with Julie Murphy from the Arizona Farm Bureau on food distribution and all the challenges and efficiencies involved in that industry.
And we're going to switch now to something that is kind of simplistically very complicated.
And it's H2O.
And a lot, I will run into people at home shows and in public who are under the misunderstanding that I don't like water treatment systems in my home.
That's not true.
I don't like the water treatment industry because it's filled with so much bad and misleading information.
But I have here in studio this morning, Mr. Paul Kaplan and Miss Carrie, thank y'all for coming in this morning, from water treatment technologies, which just happens to be the first rosy certified water treatment company in the world.
We've been rosy certified for almost 25 years.
Paul, thanks for coming in.
Yes, since 2002.
Yeah, ever since we've been doing this with the certification process.
So congratulations on that.
And it was the prior owner, Robin, that basically barged his way into my office and I was on the phone and he just sat there until I hung up.
He says, I'm here to teach you about water treatment.
He said, I'm tired of you bad mouth in my industry and boy, he sent me strength.
So water.
I want y'all to stop and think about this for one minute.
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden probably got a cold drink off of a fig leaf from the morning dew or a beautiful spring there amongst the foliage.
The same water they were drinking in the Garden of Eden is the same water we're drinking today.
Now that same drop of water has probably been processed through about a few million cows, cats, dogs and humans.
But it's the same thing, H2O.
Water wants to, by nature, restore itself to those simple three elements.
No matter how polluted it gets, if you give it the chance, it will filter itself.
Some would argue that might be a good evidence of intelligent design.
Some might argue that.
So we're not gaining any water supply, Paul.
So how can we take care of the water we've got?
And I want to repeat, at my house, I have a whole house water treatment system.
At our rental property, we have a whole house water treatment.
I'm a big fan of water treatment.
But boy, your industry is full of bad eggs.
I'm sorry to tell you that.
In case you didn't know.
No, I do.
It's just full of misleading information.
But tell us a little bit about water treatment technologies.
Well, water treatment technologies was started in 1992.
And the premise of, you know, taking care of the customer, the customer's first, whether you're an elderly person or a young person,
teaching them the right things for water treatment, such as what a water software does, or improving the quality of the taste of your water.
And through those years, we've taken care of a lot of customers.
And we pretty much base our business on service.
We also rent equipment and sell equipment.
But we also are very much into educating the consumer about the right things of water treatment.
Well, when homeowners ask me about water treatment, the first question I ask is, what do you want?
Exactly.
I mean, as a kid, I drink out of a garden hose in the backyard.
I could take that garden hose, fill up a five-gallon bucket, and stir it with a paddle.
And that's water treatment.
I'm oxygenating and I'm stirring up the water.
But the question is, water treatment is a whole lot.
And some of the bad eggs in your industry want you to believe that their terminology of water treatment actually is water conditioning and or water softening.
Correct.
Yes. There's different terminology.
Yes.
Some of it is kind of stretched out or skewed on really what it should be, as explained.
The water softener traditionally is used with sodium chloride or potassium chloride to regenerate a cation resin to create softened water.
That's the only way to remove 100% of the calcium magnesium from the water.
The two culprits here for hard water.
And why are we wanting to remove that from the water?
What benefit is that to the homeowner and the house?
The benefit is removing the hardness minerals prevents from scale buildup, such as in the hot water heater or on our fixtures, such as our kitchen faucet or our shower heads.
And it saves on soap and cleaning aids because when you have hard water, you have to add more soap to overcome the calcium and the magnesium that's causing that hard water to get more suds for cleaning effects.
So we put it through the softener first.
Correct.
And then we deliver that throughout the house.
Correct.
And then what do we do once we get to the kitchen?
Once you get to the kitchen, just to let you know, softened water is safe to drink and cook with.
99% of the homes built in Arizona, the kitchen cold is not tied into soft water.
We don't know why.
That's just where the industry has done it.
So what people do for that, they do reverse osmosis or they can do a filter system in the kitchen with a separate faucet or they use the filter that's in the refrigerator.
All that is safe.
The city water is safe.
It just doesn't taste good and sometimes it doesn't smell good.
So you can improve the quality of the taste of the water through filter or go a little bit more and do a reverse osmosis system in the kitchen for cooking and drinking.
For that purpose.
I grew up in South Louisiana and my uncles had a water softener.
I always thought it was peculiar when I was spending the night in his house and coming out of that not being familiar with it.
Just how slippery you felt and the soap never seemed to rinse off and then it was roaming as he grew up that went into a water softener system at his house that got me interested.
And now I wouldn't live without one.
Yeah, that slippery feeling is the natural oils in your skin that are now present.
Yeah.
You no longer have dirt or soap put back left on the surface of your skin.
I live in a natural dry state where my skin is kind of like dry borderline irritated constantly.
I would never go back to city water as a shower. I just couldn't do it.
Well, as we say to people, we get spoiled. When we go on vacation, we love to go on vacation, but we can't wait to get back home and shower and soft water again.
Yeah, absolutely.
We're here with Paul Kaplan, the owner of water treatment technologies.
The first Rosie certified water treatment provider and equipment provider and service.
Y'all service all.
Yeah, we service mostly all makes a model. There's a few out there that we can't, but we try to.
Okay, very good. Well, we appreciate y'all coming in today and talking about water.
If y'all have a question, anything having to do with water, quality water treatment or the differences of water.
And you talked about it water, softened water, safe to drink.
I think a glass of softened water has the same amount of salt as a half a piece of white bread.
Yes.
And yet there's an entire industry designed around scaring you in the not drinking softened water.
Yes, it puts a bird in my saddle.
We'll be back with Paul Kaplan of water treatment technologies right after this.
And the phone lines are open, one triple eight seven six seven forty three forty eight.
If you have any question about your current system or what a new system or how we would go about designing a system for you, feel free to give us a call.
One triple eight seven six seven four three four eight.
That's one triple eight rosy for you.
If you have a question, I'd like to join the conversation.
Text questions can also be sent to six twenty six twenty.
We're going to start this segment out and fountain hills with Charlie.
Good morning. Welcome to the program.
Good morning and thank you for taking my call.
I love this question about water softeners and water treatment.
And so thank you for the information.
We do have a water softener in our home and an RO system in the kitchen.
However, when we were a shower, we would shower before I smelled a lot of chlorine.
And I was like, what is this? It smells like a pool in there.
Where's the pool actually?
I looked around and figured that a carbon filter would take care of that.
How does the carbon filter work?
It's a big tall can too, just like the water software.
So it sounds like you have what we call loose carbon.
And carbon is one of the main things we use for removing chlorine from the water.
And carbon, some of it, a lot of it that we use is made from coconut shells.
It's been processed in a form to where it's little jagged, little particles that are in there that have little holes in little jagged areas and crevices where the chlorine molecule gets stuck in.
And that's what removes the chlorine from the water on that.
So in a nutshell, that's pretty much the easiest way to explain our carbon removes the chlorine from the water.
That's very, very interesting.
Because we also found, and this is interesting, in the toilet bowl, sometimes there would be a ring that formed around where the water levels out in the toilet.
I repair our bees all day, I have a mobile RV repair check.
So I deal with this kind of stuff all day.
And the ring though, well, it found, because there's no chlorine in the water, I guess it's bold or scaling that begins to build.
And so I just put a little chlorine tab into the take.
Does that sound about right?
What does the ring look like?
Well, just a little talent.
You know, like the blue things you put in your toilet, but it's not blue.
Oh, gotcha, gotcha.
Yeah, I'm not sure on that, to be honest with you.
And so when you're talking about the carbon filter stopping the chlorine particles, molecules,
there obviously got to be a limit to how much chlorine that filter can contain.
I mean, how often do you have to change those?
Typically that, like a loose carbon filter like that, should be changed every five years, the media itself.
That long, wow.
Yeah.
I was expecting something like, oh, every six months, five years?
No.
Yeah.
And so in a house that's properly softened, you shouldn't have the chlorine smell in your shower, though, correct?
You would, because the water softer is only removing the hardness minerals from the water.
That's all that it's doing.
It's not filtering out sediment, getting rid of any kind of other chlorine or any other kind of minerals that may be in the water that could cause.
That's a good question, because it doesn't remove any other kind of minerals that are in the water that may collect in the bottom of a hot water heater.
Because we get a lot of phone calls from homeowners that say, well, the plumber came out and flushed the hot water heater.
And so the softener is not working because there's all this stuff that was in the bottom of it.
And the softener doesn't remove that.
It's only removing two elements in our water.
And that's the calcium magnesium from the water.
So then on top of that, that's when you add the carbon filter.
Correct.
Is that the only option there?
Or what else can we use to prevent all that stuff that builds up in the water here?
There's a lot of things you could do.
It just depends on what you want to spend.
I mean, they do have, you know, we, they do make backwashing sediment filters.
You know, that will remove small things down very to very small particles and five micron.
The RO system going back to the RO system, that pretty much will remove or filter system will remove a lot of that sediment from drinking and cooking.
You're not really going to see too much of it when you shower, you know, or in the toilet itself.
But yeah, it just depends on how much you want to spend and how much you want to, you know, for removal of sediment.
Paul, over the course of the next couple months, I can all but guarantee we're going to get about 50 to 100 inquiries from people who are leaving Arizona for the summer wanting to know what to do with their RO system while they're gone.
What would you tell a homeowner going back home and leaving the RO tank under the kitchen sink full for four months?
What, what, what should they know?
Well, first of all, they should, they should turn off the system or turn off the water to the house just to prevent anything, not just on the RO, but something else that could cause a flood in the home.
That's, that's really the main thing that they should do when they leave.
When they come back, what we've always recommended is when the day you come back, open up that RO faucet, let all the water drain out of the tank until the water starts dribbling out and then let it fill up from there.
And what that does that allows that water that's been sitting in there to help purge through the membrane and rinse it out.
And the membrane is what gives you your good quality water.
Yeah. That's the brain of the RO system. So what you're doing is you're getting that to run more to get all that old water that's been sitting in there to flush out and then get some fresh water started.
Well, correct me if I'm wrong, but I mean, we send the water through the RO system. We're basically taking everything out of the water.
We're taking the chlorine, we're taking the floaties, we're taking it and then we're putting it in a dark tank that gets no sunlight.
How long can that water sit there and be safe to consume once once we've taken everything out of it?
It's a sea, the tank is a sealed system. Yeah.
So unless something is introduced and once the RO once the store shake is full, it's not producing any more water.
Yeah. So it's just basically like a holding tank. That's a good question.
I don't have a solid answer on how long that water will last in a storage tank.
But the protocol would become home and drain at least once.
Yes, or twice. It's really the homeowner's preference that they want to do it twice, but we've always said once.
One of the things a water treatment specialist scared me one time is changing the filters of your own RO and what your hand contact to the filter can do.
That got that was scary. I thought, oh, I'm not changing mine all by myself anymore.
Yes, you know, we don't deter homeowners from doing it.
But as a water treatment company, we make sure that, you know, filters are the filters themselves aren't touched by hands.
You know, we'll peel the plastic off of them. As we put them in, we sanitize the inside of the housings.
Paul Kaplan with water treatment technologies. We have other people on the phone with a question.
You can call 148-767-4348. Any question on water treatment, purification, or softening?
Toe tapping.
Fun information about your house home, Castler cabin. You can count on receiving that every single Saturday morning.
Right here at Rosie on the house. We're here with Paul Kaplan owner of water treatment technologies.
Paul, if somebody wanted to get you all out to the house, we ought to do a diagnosis of the existing water and analysis of what equipment might work best for them. How would they get a hold of you?
Well, they can get a hold of us by calling 602-275-828-0. Our website is WTTAZ.com. And we are also on Facebook and Instagram.
All right. Very good. Water treatment. Again, a lot of people think I'm against water treatment. I'm not. There's just so much bad information out there, misleading information. It kind of drives me nuts.
One of the things that we talk about in water treatment, in water softening, we already touch on a little bit that people bad-mouthed water softening because of the sodium we add to it, but you throw a RO on that.
And it removes it. And you're pulling it right back out. So you're getting the benefit of water softening throughout the rest of the house. You put a RO at your water consumption station in the kitchen and supply to the refrigerator and your sodium free.
Correct. Pretty simple.
Yeah. And that sodium, like, content that's added.
It's very minute. You know, as, as Rosie said, you know, in glass of water, it's about half the amount of sodium is about half a slice of white bread.
Does I tell people you would drown before you got any significant amounts of sodium in your body? It's pretty tough. I was, I was visiting a homeowner this years ago.
And she, and we were talking about a kitchen remodel. And then we got on the topic of water treatment. And she definitely did not want a salt system for so many reasons.
And in the time she told me why she didn't want a salt system, she drank two Coca-Cola's.
That's a lot of sodium. And I think one Coke has 10 times the sodium of one water, softened water glass. That's a water.
I don't know about that. Yeah, it's huge. It's a huge, but she was preaching to me on why she wanted a salt free system, but she drank two Coca-Cola's right there in the course of about a 40 minute conversation.
So we're here talking water treatment. You're welcome to call the station, ask any questions you have. I'm going to keep asking my questions because I'm going to try and straighten out the entire industry here just in the rest of the last half hour we've got.
The number to call is 1,887674348. All right, one of the things that kind of up so what one of the things that's supposed to be about the water treatment industry is that everybody jumps into it.
I agree.
It's like solar, but everyone jumps into it, but very few stay for any significant time.
Yeah, or or know how to explain explain the information properly, right?
Well, you were talking about the sediment that builds up in a water heater. Can we just talk about a water heater for a couple of minutes?
Because I think when in discussing that, we're going to help train homeowners on how to spot unscrupulous water treatment salespeople and or unscrupulous plumbers.
We'll try. Can we go there? Yes.
So water heater and those of you that know we podcast this, it's on our YouTube channel. I'm actually going to show some props here and you've got some props.
Yes, but we've got the water heater and in the water heater down sticking down from the top is what we call anonrod.
This is what one brand new looks like. Couldn't, couldn't be any prettier or cleaner than that, but it's designed to be a sacrificial element.
Correct. With hard water.
We want it to corrode so the water heater tank doesn't corrode.
We want it so that it collects the harness minerals theoretically so that they don't collect or eat on the inside of the hot water heater.
So here's a tip you're only going to get it rosy on the house.
If you've got a plumber or a water treatment person coming to your house and they're servicing the equipment, they're recommending you exchange the anonrod in your water heater.
You can agree to it if you want, but ask them to leave the old anonrod at the house because I'm about ready to show you what one looks like.
We have people calling all the time saying a plumber insisted I remove this anonrod and replace it.
Now that's generally a $7,500 to $150 upcharge for something that has a profit margin of about a thousand percent.
This anonrod does not need to be replaced. This anonrod has just begun doing its job, but it looks ugly so they show that to the homeowner and say,
oh, look at this. This is in your hot water heater.
If your anonrod looks like this, you might consider replacing it at this point.
I would agree on that one.
So now this one is really got about more than halfway through its useful life. It's ugly, but it's doing what it's supposed to do.
So if you are upsold an anonrod replacement for your water heater by a water treatment specialist, anonrod plumber,
and your anonrod doesn't look like this, this anonrod needs to be replaced. It's gone.
All it is is the steel skeleton core down the magnesium sleeve.
So that's one place that water treatment people drive me nuts. They come out to service your equipment.
And then they find three or four other add-on upcharges. They're going to throw on you.
That always bothers me too.
And that anonrod is the one honesty test you can put them to and just have them leave it and then compare it to the pictures I just showed you.
So anyway, Rosie's ongoing grief with dishonest service providers.
I'm glad Paul's here to straighten it out on water treatment. Like I say, he was the first Rosie certified water treatment specialist in the entire world.
Water treatment technologies located right here in the greater feeding area. What's your service area, Paul?
We service all over the valley. We go from New River all the way down to Cascaran.
We go up to all the way out to Buckeye all the way to Gold Canyon.
So that whole area.
And how would people get a hold of you?
Well, they can get a hold of us by calling our office at 602-275-828-0.
Or they can email us at WTTaz.com or they can find us on Facebook or Instagram.
And this is kind of an off question.
When we started working with y'all back in 2022, one of the services that was offered was water fountain purification.
I haven't seen a working water fountain. This building's got them on every floor.
Water has never come out of it. Is that even something that's still relevant?
Yes. We do service in cell drinking founts for building schools, businesses.
We're a major manufacturer warranty for a good majority of them for service.
So yes, we do service them.
I just need to get you connected with this building's maintenance.
I thought, well, maybe with the introduction of bottled water, that that whole industry just evaporated.
No. In fact, they've kind of jumped on that and now they have what they call bottle fillers.
So people can have their bottle that they drink, but then they can go and fill it up at the station.
Their bottle filler stations with the traditional drinking fountain.
I have seen that. It usually has like a counter and like how many plastic bottles it saved every time.
Yes. You refill versus getting another plastic bottle.
Now, coming out of St. Mary's high school, how did you get into water treatment and connecting with the petty johns?
I had worked with their daughter for at a summer, a summer job.
And we became friends and I was in between jobs and they had an opening for service technician and I applied and that's how it began.
I knew nothing. I learned everything from the ground up, which that's what we, when we hire new people, we don't want people to know anything.
We want to teach them the proper way to do things, not to bring in bad habits from other places.
You're not having to untie them.
Exactly. Well, you learn from two very good eggs.
Yes.
Robin and Andy, and they really knew their water treatment for sure. So you were learning from the very best.
I want to talk a little bit about what water treatment systems, when people are disappointed in what they're getting and what's being sold out there.
And I don't want to put you in an uncomfortable place. I'm very comfortable talking about the scallywags in your industry, but I don't want you to fit.
I don't want to put you in an uncomfortable place, but there are a lot of water treatment systems sold that try and convince you they're going to accomplish soft and water.
Correct.
But they don't.
And you were talking a little bit about descaling.
Yes. The new thing now is there, well, it's not new, but in the industry, now they have descalers.
Some people classify them as no salt water softeners. Right.
They're theoretically, they're supposed to be classified as descalers. Yeah.
And they're not going to remove the calcium magnesium from the water 100% like a traditional water softener does.
So for people that have had water softeners and they switched to this system, they tend to learn fairly quickly that it's not the same.
And they tend to not be happy and they switch.
But then you have people that have never had a water softener before and they buy the system and they see a slight difference and they're happy with it.
But it just needs to be explained to the communities that it's not.
It's not a water softener. It does not remove harness minerals from the water like a traditional salt based water softener does.
Well, I took the stand many years ago.
About the time I met Robin and he educated me is that if your water treatment equipment isn't water quality certified by the water quality association.
It's well, not everybody's equipment is certified by the water quality association components are certified through the water quality association.
Your big industry water treatment people have their stuff certified.
They build everything from the ground up. So they're able to do the whole third thing that they build from the ground up to get that certified 99% of us out there build our own equipment with certified water quality association parts.
I think that's a kind of an easy place for homeowners to start is the equipment certified or not or the components because I because I can say anything I want.
Yeah, about whatever I bolt to the side of your house.
Yeah, but if it's not documentable, it's not certified. I was never been tested, which is what a lot of equipment is.
It's just a marketing piece of junk mounted on the side of your house.
I can say that you can.
Yes, a lot of the stuff you buy online, a good chunk of that is, you know, the same prop, the same, same, same equipment.
Yeah, it's just been labeled 20 different things kind of like, you know, I don't know all of them, but on the appliance world, you know, were pool, GE, they're all the same coming out of the same manufacturer.
Yes, yeah, they just have different names.
Marie and surprise, good morning. Welcome to the program. How may we help you?
Thank you for my call. My question is we currently have a water softener and a reverse osmosis system, which we're very happy with.
But my question is how often do we need to have someone come out and change the filters on the RO system and maintain the water softener?
Is it once a year and what's the reasonable cost?
That's a good question. Once a year should be done on changing the filters and servicing the reverse osmosis system.
The water softener with our company, we typically as a courtesy one where they're doing a filter change, we will take a look at the water softener, making sure that everything looks good.
We'll test the water, make sure it has salt, make sure the time is correct.
Cost varies, you know, from company to company for changing filters.
Standard filters, you know, as we have here, you know, typically you have a sediment filter and a carbon block filter. That's what this is.
And with doing service once a year and abusing the system, you'll get about 10 years out of that RO system that you guys have.
And for a typical system to come out and replace there in a RO there's going to be two, three, there could be up to, well nowadays there could be up to like six filters that we will have.
Yes, but on standard, standard is between three and four filters that get changed.
And what are they running a piece?
They range between, they range between, you know, 150 to $300.
Okay, you know, just depending on what all they have.
And depending on the occupancy of the house, but you can generally, like in my house, there's 18 grandchildren to go through that place.
You know, six kids and we go through a lot of water.
So I'm generally having mine checked twice a year.
It should only be done once a year.
How much abuse it gets in residential, it's just once a year.
Awesome. Good to know.
What we talk about the corrosiveness of water and the water's ability to always want to return to itself, always want to return to just H2O.
Yeah, balance itself out. Just balance itself out.
Well, why do we use the plastic line on the RO?
Well, the plastic line on the RO is what we use because if you use any kind of metal products such as steel or cast iron or galvanize or copper, the RO water is aggressive.
So it's wanting to bounce off out.
So it's going to literally leech those materials out of the plumbing to make itself balanced.
Stainless steel is one that also our water can go through.
Okay.
So you can use stainless steel or plastic or polytubing, yes.
Yes. Stainless steel is a little expensive.
So polytubing is the best way to go.
And stainless steel doesn't bend.
So it's correct.
You're the polytubing.
Yeah, you can maneuver it around.
If you've seen underneath your kitchen cabinet, you know, there's no straight line.
Correct.
It has to be twist and turn.
Yes.
And we get this right sometimes.
Can you something about our own coffee pots?
I don't know.
Like if it's a metal coffee pot, you're not supposed to use oil.
You really shouldn't.
I mean, it does take.
It will take some time for it to kind of, you know, break down.
We use a specific filter we have.
We have made.
Yes.
We do have one proprietary thing where it has a product in there that will coat the inside of the lines of any type of metal product such as if it has an old copper line and old home going to a fridge.
Okay.
Or your coffee pot.
And it's the media itself, you know, other people can get it too.
It's, it's just what we call phosphate and phosphate is just a normal thing that that's been used in the industry to put a protective coating on a metal surface.
And then last question that we haven't addressed.
When you're doing a water softer, you have to have a loop.
You don't have to.
Okay.
Explain that what the loop is.
Okay.
So homes nowadays are built with a water softener loop.
So that loop creates a soft water loop in the home that goes to every single fixture in the house except for the kitchen cold.
When you do not have a water softener loop, we can create one.
Essentially, you're, you're going where the water source comes into the home.
You're connecting into the city water there, putting it to the water softener and then tying it back in to where the water ties into the house.
Now, the only disadvantage with that is that means everything's on soft water and that includes a faucet on the back patio.
Or if you ever refill on your pool, you just have to be aware of.
Go ahead.
That's not going to hurt anything.
It just adds cost to that water use out there.
Exactly.
You're going to use more soft water.
So just be aware of that.
The advantage with that side though is now your kitchen cold is on soft water.
So now you're hand washing with complete 100% soft water.
And a lot of times they'll leave a water softening line because this is done after the irrigation.
Correct.
So the irrigation comes off first.
We tap in after that.
Yes.
But there's a, you can have a hose bib put out through the garage so you can wash your car.
Correct.
With softened water.
Even when you have a water softener loop, we put a soft water hose bib at that loop.
So somebody can tie a hose to it and wheel it out outside of the garage and they can wash their car with it.
Or your windows.
You would much prefer to wash your windows with that water than the city wash.
Yes, you can.
All right.
Water treatment technologies.
How would someone get a hold of you?
Well, you can get a hold of us at 602-275-828-0.
You can reach us at WTTaz.com and we're on Facebook and Instagram.
Water treatment technologies.
We appreciate y'all coming in this morning. Thanks a million.
No problem.

Rosie on the House

Rosie on the House

Rosie on the House
