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Your dishes come out of the dishwasher without spots. Your whites stay white instead of turning orange. The rotten egg smell disappears when you turn on the tap.
These aren’t small conveniences. When you install a point-of-entry system, every drop of water entering your home gets treated before it reaches your fixtures, appliances, or family. That means your water heater isn’t fighting scale buildup. Your washing machine isn’t working overtime against iron staining. Your skin and hair aren’t dealing with chlorine residue after every shower.
The water in Weirsdale comes from the Floridan Aquifer, which means most homes are dealing with hardness levels between 100-300 PPM. Add in the iron and sulfur that’s common in Lake County groundwater, and you’re looking at stained toilets, corroded fixtures, and appliances that fail years before they should. A whole home carbon filter combined with the right treatment system stops all of that at the source.
You’re not just filtering drinking water. You’re protecting a significant investment in your home and eliminating problems that cost you time and money every single week.
We’ve been solving hard water problems for Central Florida families since the 1970s. We’re A-rated by the Better Business Bureau with a 5-star rating and zero complaints, which matters when you’re comparing us to national companies with reputations for selling systems and disappearing.
We’re members of the National Water Quality Association, which means we follow industry standards that actually protect you. Every system we install is custom-designed based on your water analysis and your family’s actual usage, because one size absolutely does not fit all when you’re dealing with Weirsdale’s unique water chemistry.
We don’t do plumbing or water heaters. We do water treatment, and we’ve been doing it longer than most companies in this space have existed. That focus matters when you need someone who knows the difference between bacterial iron and ferrous iron, or why your neighbor’s system might not work for your home even though you’re on the same street.
We start with a free water analysis at your home. Not a basic hardness test—a real analysis that tells us what’s actually in your water and at what levels. Iron, sulfur, hardness, pH, chlorine, bacteria. We need to know what we’re treating before we can design a system that works.
Once we know what you’re dealing with, we design a multi-stage sediment filtration system specific to your home. If you’ve got iron, we’re installing an Iron Clear system that removes rust and kills bacterial iron and E. coli. Sulfur problem? Sulfur Clear handles that rotten egg smell. High hardness? We’ll talk through whether a traditional softener or a salt-free system makes more sense for your situation.
Most systems include whole home carbon filters to remove chlorine taste and odor, plus any organic compounds you don’t want in your water. If you’re on a well or dealing with bacteria concerns, we add UV purification—a Purelight system that kills waterborne organisms without chemicals. The entire setup is installed at your main water line, which means it treats everything before it splits off to your kitchen, bathrooms, laundry, and outdoor spigots.
Installation typically takes a day. We handle everything from start to finish, and we don’t subcontract the work. After it’s running, we test the output to make sure you’re getting the results we promised.
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Every whole house water filter we install is built around your water test results. You’re not getting a one-size-fits-all package. You’re getting a system designed to handle the specific contaminants in your water at the levels they’re actually present.
That usually means a combination approach. Sediment filtration removes particles and rust. A water softener or salt-free conditioner addresses the hardness that’s destroying your appliances and leaving scale on everything. Carbon filtration pulls out chlorine, bad taste, and odor. If iron or sulfur is the issue, we add specialized media that targets those problems specifically. For bacteria or well water concerns, UV purification is the final stage.
In Weirsdale, most homes need iron removal. The groundwater here carries enough iron to stain everything it touches, and a standard softener won’t fix that. Our Iron Clear systems use filter media backwashing to regenerate and maintain effectiveness over time, which means you’re not replacing expensive cartridges every few months. The system cleans itself.
We also offer salt-free options for people who want to prevent scale buildup without adding sodium to their water or dealing with regeneration cycles. These systems have no moving parts, no electrical components, and virtually no maintenance. They condition the water so minerals don’t stick to surfaces, while keeping the healthy minerals in your water.
You’ll get professional installation, a walkthrough of how everything works, and a real warranty backed by a company that’s been here for 50 years. We also offer a $500 discount for military members and first responders.
Most whole house systems in Florida run between $800 and $3,000 or more, depending on what you’re treating and how much water your home uses. If you only need basic sediment and carbon filtration, you’re on the lower end. If you’re dealing with iron, sulfur, bacteria, and hardness, you need a more comprehensive system with multiple stages, and that costs more.
We don’t give quotes over the phone because your water chemistry determines what you need. A family in Weirsdale dealing with 250 PPM hardness and iron staining needs a completely different setup than someone in the same neighborhood with city water and a chlorine taste issue. We test your water first, then design a system that actually solves your specific problems.
The cost also depends on capacity. A system rated for 1,000,000 gallons lasts longer and handles higher flow rates than a 600,000-gallon system, but it costs more upfront. We size everything based on your household usage so you’re not overpaying for capacity you don’t need or undersizing a system that won’t keep up.
Yes, but you need the right type of system. A standard carbon filter or water softener won’t remove iron or sulfur effectively. You need a system specifically designed to handle those contaminants.
Our Iron Clear systems use oxidation and filtration to remove both ferrous iron (dissolved) and ferric iron (the rust you can see). They also handle bacterial iron, which is the slimy buildup that clogs pipes and creates that metallic smell. The system kills bacteria like E. coli at the same time. For sulfur, the Sulfur Clear system targets hydrogen sulfide, which is what causes that rotten egg odor when you turn on the tap.
These systems use filter media backwashing, which means they regenerate automatically. The media doesn’t get saturated and stop working—it cleans itself during a backwash cycle, usually overnight. You’re not replacing filters constantly or dealing with a system that loses effectiveness after a few months. In Lake County, where iron and sulfur are common in well water, this type of system is often the only thing that actually works long-term.
A water softener removes hardness minerals—calcium and magnesium—through an ion exchange process. It prevents scale buildup in your pipes and appliances, and it makes soap work better. But it doesn’t filter out chlorine, sediment, iron, bacteria, or other contaminants. It’s solving one specific problem.
A whole house filter treats a broader range of issues. Carbon filters remove chlorine, bad taste, and odor. Sediment filters catch rust and particles. UV systems kill bacteria. Specialty filters handle iron and sulfur. Most homes need both—a water softener combination with filtration stages—because Central Florida water has multiple problems happening at once.
If you only install a softener, you’ll still have chlorine taste, iron staining, and sediment issues. If you only install a carbon filter, you’ll still have hard water destroying your appliances. The most effective approach is a point-of-entry system that addresses everything in stages. We test your water, identify what’s actually present, and design a system that handles all of it in the right order.
It depends on the type of system you have. Salt-based water softeners need salt refills every few weeks and occasional resin cleaning. Carbon filters need media replacement every 3-5 years depending on usage and water quality. UV bulbs need replacement annually to maintain effectiveness.
Systems with automatic backwashing—like our Iron Clear and Sulfur Clear setups—handle most of their own maintenance. They regenerate on a schedule, flushing out accumulated iron, sulfur, and sediment so the media stays effective. You’re not doing anything except occasionally checking salt levels if you have a softener in the system.
Salt-free conditioners have almost no maintenance. No moving parts, no regeneration cycles, no media to replace. They condition the water to prevent scale without consumables. Sediment pre-filters might need cartridge changes every 6-12 months if you’re on well water with heavy sediment, but that’s a 5-minute job. We walk you through everything during installation, and we’re available if you need service. We don’t sell systems and disappear—we’ve been servicing Central Florida homes for over 50 years.
Technically, yes. Realistically, you probably shouldn’t. These systems tie into your main water line, which means you’re cutting into pressurized plumbing and installing equipment that needs to be sized correctly, plumbed in the right sequence, and set up to drain properly during backwash cycles.
If you install a system that’s undersized for your flow rate, you’ll have pressure drops throughout the house. If you plumb the stages in the wrong order, you won’t get the results you’re expecting. If the drain line isn’t set up correctly, you’ll have backwash water going places it shouldn’t. And if you’re adding a UV system, it needs to be the final stage after filtration, or sediment will block the UV light and bacteria won’t be killed.
We’ve seen plenty of DIY installs that didn’t work because the system wasn’t matched to the water chemistry or the household demand. A whole house filter system rated for 10 GPM won’t keep up with a family of five running multiple showers and appliances at the same time. You’ll get treated water, but your pressure will drop to a trickle. Professional installation means the system is designed for your specific situation, installed correctly, and tested to make sure it’s delivering the results you need.
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