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Your appliances stop working against you. Scale buildup disappears from heating elements, which means your water heater isn’t burning extra energy trying to heat through mineral deposits. Your dishwasher and washing machine run the way they’re supposed to—efficiently, without clogged valves or reduced cleaning power.
Your skin and hair feel different almost immediately. That tight, dry feeling after a shower? That’s hard water stripping natural oils. Soft water rinses clean without leaving mineral residue behind.
You’ll use less soap, less detergent, and less shampoo because they actually lather properly. The money you save on cleaning products alone adds up faster than most homeowners expect. And your plumbing system—the pipes, fixtures, and connections you can’t see—stops deteriorating from constant mineral buildup that leads to leaks and expensive repairs down the road.
We’re a member of the National Water Quality Association and hold an A+ Better Business Bureau rating with 5-star reviews and no complaints. That’s not common in this industry, and it matters when you’re letting someone into your home to work on your water system.
We specialize in whole-house water purification and softening for homeowners in Deerwood and throughout North and Central Florida. We don’t do plumbing or water heaters—just water treatment. We test your water, size the system correctly for your home, and install equipment that actually handles the specific hardness levels in this area.
Jacksonville-area water, including Deerwood, typically ranges from 100 to 200 parts per million of hardness. That’s considered moderately hard to hard, and it’s enough to cause real damage over time if you’re not treating it.
We start with professional water testing. Not a guess, not a generic recommendation—actual numbers that tell us your water’s hardness level, chlorine content, and whether there’s iron, sulfur, or sediment we need to address. That data determines what size system you need and what type of filtration makes sense for your home.
Once we know what we’re dealing with, we walk you through the options. Whole-house systems handle everything—every faucet, every shower, every appliance. The system gets installed where your main water line enters the house, usually in the garage or utility area. Installation typically takes a few hours, and you’re back to using water the same day.
After installation, the system runs automatically. It regenerates on a schedule based on your household’s water usage, flushing out collected minerals and recharging the resin that removes hardness. You’ll add salt to the brine tank periodically—that’s the only maintenance most homeowners deal with. We handle any service or adjustments if something needs attention, but a properly sized water softening system mostly runs itself.
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A water softener system removes calcium and magnesium—the minerals that cause hardness—through an ion exchange process. The resin inside the tank swaps those hard minerals for sodium ions, and your water comes out soft. It’s not complicated technology, but sizing it correctly for your home’s water usage and local hardness levels is what separates systems that work from systems that don’t.
In Deerwood, you’re dealing with water that’s hard enough to cause scale buildup but not so extreme that you need industrial-grade equipment. Most homes here do well with a properly sized residential system that can handle 100-200 PPM hardness and regenerate efficiently without wasting water or salt.
You’ll also want to consider whether you need additional filtration for chlorine, which most municipal water contains, or sediment from older pipes in certain neighborhoods. A whole-house approach handles everything at once—softening plus filtration—so you’re not just addressing hardness while ignoring other water quality issues that affect taste, smell, and how your water feels.
The result is water that protects your appliances, costs less to heat, and doesn’t leave you feeling like you need lotion every time you wash your hands. Your plumbing system lasts longer. Your water heater runs more efficiently. And you stop replacing appliances years before you should have to.
If you’re seeing white buildup on faucets and showerheads, that’s limescale from hard water. If your water heater is less than ten years old but already struggling, or your dishwasher leaves spots on glasses even with rinse aid, you’ve got a hardness problem.
Most Deerwood homes have water in the 100-200 PPM range, which is enough to cause appliance damage and higher energy bills over time. Professional water testing gives you the actual number, and anything above 60 PPM is considered hard enough to treat.
The other sign is how your skin and hair feel. If you’re using lotion constantly or your hair feels dry and dull even with good products, hard water is likely stripping natural oils faster than you can replace them.
A water softener removes hardness minerals—calcium and magnesium—that cause scale buildup and appliance damage. It doesn’t filter out chlorine, sediment, or contaminants. It’s specifically designed to address hardness.
A water filter removes chlorine, sediment, and other particles that affect taste, smell, and clarity. Some filters also reduce contaminants depending on the type of filtration media used.
Most homes benefit from both. A whole-house system combines softening and filtration so you’re treating hardness and improving overall water quality at the same time. That way you’re not just protecting appliances—you’re also getting water that tastes better and doesn’t smell like chlorine.
Most repairs involve replacing a valve, fixing a timer, or addressing a clog in the brine line. Those typically run a few hundred dollars depending on the part and labor. If the resin tank fails, that’s a bigger job, but it’s rare if the system was sized correctly and maintained.
The bigger issue is buying from a company that doesn’t service what they sell. Some national companies install systems and then make it nearly impossible to get support when something breaks. You’re either waiting weeks for a technician or paying inflated service fees because you’re locked into their network.
We handle service calls for systems we install, and we stock common parts so repairs don’t turn into multi-week ordeals. A properly maintained water softening system should run for 10-15 years without major issues, but when something does need attention, you want a company that actually answers the phone.
No. The amount of sodium added during the softening process is minimal—usually less than 12.5 milligrams per 8-ounce glass for every grain of hardness removed. For context, a slice of bread has about 150 milligrams of sodium.
If your water tastes salty, something’s wrong with the system. Either the brine tank is overfilling, the valve isn’t rinsing properly, or the regeneration cycle is set incorrectly. That’s a service issue, not a normal characteristic of soft water.
Most people notice that soft water feels different—smoother, almost slippery—because soap rinses off completely instead of leaving a residue. That’s not a taste issue, it’s a texture difference. If you’re concerned about sodium intake, you can install a reverse osmosis system at your kitchen sink for drinking and cooking water, which removes sodium along with other dissolved solids.
Most homeowners add salt every 4-8 weeks depending on water usage and hardness levels. If you have a larger household or your water is particularly hard, you’ll go through salt faster. The system will keep working as long as there’s salt in the brine tank, but letting it run completely empty can cause issues.
You’ll know it’s time to add salt when the level drops below halfway in the tank. Use water softener salt specifically—not table salt, not rock salt. The type of salt matters. Pellets dissolve cleanly and leave less residue than crystals, which means less maintenance and fewer clogs in the brine line.
If you’re adding salt more than once a month, either your system is undersized for your household, the hardness level is higher than expected, or the regeneration schedule needs adjusting. A properly sized system shouldn’t burn through salt so fast that it becomes a weekly chore.
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