Backwashing Water Filters BasicsFleck Backwashing Water Filters. Carbon, Birm, Filter Ag, KDF, Centaur Catalytic Carbon, Calcite, Corosex, ChemSorb, Multi-Media and more. Fleck and Structural Components.This page features large backwashing filters.
A backwashing filter is a simple device that consists of a large tank called a mineral tank that is filled with a filtering substance called a filter medium. (The plural is media.) Water enters the top of the tank through a special control valve and passes downward through the medium, which removes impurities and holds them. Some media do not hold impurities, but cause a change to occur. Calcite, for example, dissolves and in the process increases the pH of acidic water. The treated water then enters a tube at the bottom of the mineral tank, passes upward through the tube (called a riser), and exits the filter via the control valve. When the filter medium is saturated with contaminants, the control valve initiates a backwash. The backwash is an operation in which water passes backward through the filter at a rapid rate. It enters the tank at the bottom via the riser tube, then passes upward through the filter medium, exiting at the top, via the control valve. The rapid upward flow, in addition to washing away stored impurities, fluffs and resettles the medium bed, preparing it for another filtering cycle. MediaFilter media are selected according to purpose. Some of the most common are Birm (iron removal), Filter Ag (sediment removal), Calcite (increase pH of acidic water), KDF55 (chlorine and lead removal), KDF85 (iron and hydrogen sulfide reduction), Manganese Greensand (iron and sulfide removal), etc. Some media have numerous applications, like the very useful and widely used GAC, or Granular Activated Carbon, which is used to remove chlorine, the by-products of chlorination, pesticides, herbicides, and chemicals in general. GAC, following proper pretreatment, also removes iron and hydrogen sulfide. It comes in various formulations made from a variety of materials (bituminous coal, coconut shells, wood, etc.), each with its own special properties. Centaur©, a specially processed version of GAC, is aimed at special problems like chloramines in city tap water and iron and hydrogen sulfide in well water. This site includes a useful Filter Media Guide and a second guide that gives flow and backwash features of the various media.
How To ChooseChoosing a backwashing filter can be a simple or a complex issue. You should not expect a backwashing filter to be a magic, one-step solution to any problem. Often, in fact, it is the final stage of a more complex treatment system. Below is a brief problem-oriented suggestion list. It will give you a place to start. City Water Problems KDF55, an excellent long-term remover of free chlorine, is not effective against chloramine or combined chlorine. It is often mixed in small quantities with GAC to enhance its performance.
Fluoride Reduction Although reduction of fluoride by standard GAC is not claimed by manufacturers, the reality is that carbon often reduces fluoride. Although fluoride reduction by carbon filtration may depend on many variables (pH, mineral content of the water, etc.) that make performance uncertain, a good carbon filter is probably your best bet for fluoride reduction in city water. We can't promise it, but it often works.
Chemical Reduction
Hard Water Hardness is an overabundance of calcium and magnesium. It is removed by a water softener, which is an ion exchanger, not a filter. Go here to see water softeners. Well Water Problems
Iron Removal
pH Increase
Hydrogen Sulfide Removal
Sediment
Hard Water
Bacteria Links to Backwashing Filter Information on this SiteGeneral Media Guide Backwash and Flow Characteristics of Filter Media Simple 5600 Backwashing Filters Backwashing Filter Selection Page for Fleck Filters Back to Main Product Page |
Backwashing Filters
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