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The water coming out of a private well in Conant isn’t the same as city water somewhere else. It’s pulled straight from the Floridan Aquifer a thick layer of limestone that runs under all of Lake County and by the time it reaches your tap, it’s carrying dissolved minerals, iron, sulfur, and in some cases nitrates from decades of agricultural use on this land. That’s not speculation. That’s just what the geology here does to groundwater.
A properly designed reverse osmosis water filtration system removes what your well pump can’t. We’re talking about lead, nitrates, PFAS, fluoride, dissolved solids, and the kind of stuff that doesn’t have a taste or smell but still ends up in every glass you pour. For families in older mobile homes and single-family houses built in the seventies, eighties, and nineties which describes most of the housing stock in this area that also means stopping the slow damage that hard, iron-heavy water does to your pipes, water heater, and appliances year after year.
Most people in Conant are spending real money on bottled water every month because they don’t trust what comes out of the tap. That’s a reasonable response to a real problem, but it’s also an expensive one. A whole-house or under-sink RO system gives you cleaner water at the source, on demand, without the ongoing cost. The math tends to work out pretty quickly.
We’re based in Leesburg the Lake County seat, about ten to twelve miles from Conant. Water treatment is all we do. Not plumbing. Not water heaters. Not a side service bolted onto something else. Just water, done right.
We hold an A-rating with the Better Business Bureau, a five-star rating, and zero complaints on file. You can look that up at bbb.org right now it’s a public record, not a marketing claim. In an industry where national companies are well-known for disappearing after installation, that kind of track record is genuinely rare. We’re also members of the National Water Quality Association, which means our technicians are trained specifically for Florida water chemistry, including the iron, sulfur, and hardness issues that come with Floridan Aquifer groundwater in the Conant area.
If you’re a veteran, active military, or first responder, we offer a $500 discount on installation and we support the Tunnels to Towers Foundation, which builds mortgage-free homes for Gold Star and fallen first responder families. That’s not a footnote. It’s part of how we operate.
It starts with a real water test. Not a quick hardness strip and a sales pitch an actual lab-grade analysis of what your specific water contains. For well water in Conant, that means checking iron levels, sulfur content, hardness, pH, nitrates, and any other contaminants relevant to your property and the surrounding land use. The Conant area’s history as a citrus-growing region means fertilizer runoff has had decades to work into the shallow groundwater, so nitrate testing matters here more than it does in a lot of other places.
Once the test results are in, the recommendation is built around what your water actually needs not around what’s most profitable to install. If an under-sink RO drinking water system is the right fit, that’s what gets recommended. If your well water issues are significant enough to warrant a whole-house purification system, that conversation happens with real data behind it. Our installation is handled by a local technician from the Lake County area, not a subcontractor dispatched from a regional call center.
After installation, you’re not handed a warranty card and left to figure it out. Filter replacements, membrane service, and follow-up support are part of the relationship. That’s a meaningful distinction in a rural area like Conant, where the nearest service call from a national company might not happen for weeks.
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A reverse osmosis system works by forcing water through a semi-permeable membrane with pores so small about 0.0001 microns that dissolved solids, heavy metals, nitrates, PFAS, fluoride, and most contaminants simply can’t pass through. What comes out the other side is clean, clear water that tastes the way water is supposed to taste. For Conant residents on private wells, that process is handling a heavier load than most the Floridan Aquifer delivers naturally hard water with detectable iron and often hydrogen sulfide, and without any municipal treatment standing between the aquifer and your glass.
Under-sink RO systems are installed directly at the kitchen tap and are a strong fit for households that want clean drinking and cooking water without a whole-house investment. Whole-house reverse osmosis and purification systems treat every water source in the home showers, laundry, every faucet and are the right call when the well water issues are significant enough to affect appliances, plumbing, or skin and hair. For older homes in Conant with galvanized pipes or aging water heaters, protecting the whole system often makes more financial sense long-term than treating one tap.
Under-sink RO installation in Lake County may require a permit depending on the scope of work. We handle that process and make sure everything is done to code. Every system is sized and configured based on your actual water test results not a one-size-fits-all package pulled off a shelf.
If you’re on a private well in Conant, there’s no municipal treatment between the Floridan Aquifer and your tap. That means whatever the aquifer is carrying iron, sulfur, hardness minerals, and potentially nitrates from the area’s long agricultural history arrives in your water untreated. Whether you need an RO system specifically depends on what your water test shows. Some wells in Conant have iron and hardness issues that are best addressed with a softener or whole-house filter first, with an RO system handling the drinking water. Others have contaminant profiles that make RO the first and most important step.
The only honest answer starts with a real water test. We test first, every time, and build the recommendation around what your specific well is actually producing.
That sulfur smell comes from hydrogen sulfide a gas that forms naturally as water moves through the limestone and organic material in the Floridan Aquifer. It’s one of the most common complaints from well water users in Lake County and the surrounding area, and it’s more noticeable when you run hot water because heat releases the gas faster. The smell doesn’t necessarily mean your water is unsafe to drink, but it does mean your water has a sulfur compound load that a basic carbon filter won’t fully address.
A whole-house purification system that includes the right pre-filtration for your specific sulfur and iron levels confirmed by a water test eliminates the smell at the source, not just at one tap. UV purification can also address any bacterial component that may be contributing. The fix is real and it’s not complicated, but it does need to be matched to what your water in Conant actually contains.
A water softener addresses hardness it uses an ion exchange process to remove calcium and magnesium, which protects your pipes, appliances, and water heater from scale buildup. That’s genuinely valuable for homes in Conant, where the Floridan Aquifer produces naturally hard water that shortens the life of water heaters and leaves white deposits on every faucet and showerhead. But a softener doesn’t remove nitrates, PFAS, lead, fluoride, dissolved solids, or most other contaminants. It trades calcium and magnesium for sodium, and it doesn’t make your drinking water cleaner in the way most people mean when they say they want clean water.
A reverse osmosis system works at a much finer level. It filters water through a membrane that blocks dissolved contaminants a softener can’t touch. Many homes in Conant benefit from both a softener to protect the plumbing and appliances, and an RO system to produce clean drinking and cooking water. Your water test results will show which combination actually makes sense for your home.
An under-sink reverse osmosis drinking water system typically runs in the range of several hundred dollars on the low end to around $1,000 or more for a quality multi-stage system with professional installation. Whole-house reverse osmosis and purification systems are a larger investment generally starting around $2,000 to $3,000 and going up depending on the size of your home, the severity of your water issues, and what pre-filtration the system requires. For well water homes in Conant with significant iron, sulfur, or hardness loads, the pre-treatment stage adds to the overall cost but is often what makes the difference between a system that works and one that fails within a few years.
The more useful number to think about is the long-term math. If you’re spending $75 to $100 a month on bottled water, that’s $900 to $1,200 a year going out the door for water that often comes from a municipal tap run through the same RO process you could have at home. Add in the cost of a water heater replacement caused by scale damage typically $800 to $1,500 and the investment in a quality system starts to look different. We provide a free water analysis before any quote, so you know exactly what you’re solving before you spend a dollar.
Yes reverse osmosis is one of the most effective methods available for removing nitrates from drinking water. This matters specifically in Conant and the broader Lake County area because the land here has a long agricultural history. Citrus groves, nurseries, and farming operations have applied fertilizers to this soil for well over a century, and nitrates from that runoff have had decades to work their way into the shallow groundwater. Nitrate contamination doesn’t have a taste or smell, so you won’t know it’s there without a test but it’s a documented concern in agricultural groundwater across Central Florida.
Nitrates are particularly concerning for infants and for older adults with compromised kidney function both demographics well-represented in the Lake County area. A standard carbon filter or water softener will not remove nitrates. Reverse osmosis will. If you’re on a private well in Conant and haven’t tested for nitrates recently, that’s a conversation worth having before assuming your water is clean.
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