I'm not sure RO is always the best way to go. It's expensive and uses a lot of water when it back flows. My well doesn't require more than a sediment filter. If you're filtering municipal water, a carbon filter is all you need to remove the chlorine taste. An RO is typically only needed when you have a dirty well with many dissolved solids, and perhaps that's the case for you.
This is our case also.
truth
An RO is typically only needed when you have a dirty well with many dissolved solids, and perhaps that's the case for you.
Or anywhere with hard water. Or when you want to remove pollutants that aren't affected by carbon, like nitrates, salt, fluoride, arsenic, and other heavy metals.
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