jb1 said:
RustyBumper, Accumulator and jdoria, would you guys please post (or PM me) the brand and model #s of the systems y'all are using? I'd like a ballpark idea of what your system goes for - I'm meeting with the builder on Saturday and they should have a price on what their system will cost and I'd like to be able to compare the systems. Thanks for your help - I appreciate it.
Since I have no point of reference, how many gallons of water will 40 lbs. of potassium & sodium chloride treat? I'll check my water bill to see how many gallons I use per month.
I won't be of much help here as my system was part of a big overall job so I can't even guess how much it cost. Plus, I'm just guessing how frequently to run the softeners, erring on the side of more often than necessary (currently every third day for the house and less often for the shop). And I don't refill them at set intervals, but rather just when it occurs to me; supposedly you should keep the salt at a certain level but I don't find that to be necessary so I just make sure they don't get too low.
I guess it sounds kinda goofy, but I simply don't know how much salt/potassium chloride I go through. I buy about $150 worth and that's good for a few months.
How often *you* will need to run them will depend on your water quality along with the amount of water anyhow. The contractor will take water samples for analysis to determine what equipment you need and how often to run it.
I suggest you price the type of softeners that use flow-meters to determine when to regenerate. I did *NOT* go that route this last time (knee-jerk reaction to issues with my previous system) and I think I made a mistake there. What I have now works super but I sure go through a lot of salt (and water, each regeneration wastes quite a bit).
The size of the softener will also depend on the quality/quantity of water used. My (municipal) water is pretty bad.
I have Nelsen Water Treatment Solutions brand softeners, Model 5600. The flow-rate version is called a Model 5600 Econominder.
A softener with the NON-flow-meter, like what I have now, should cost about $400 installed (the vendors often offer installation as part of the deal). At least that's what the cheapest source in my area charges for a unit a little smaller than mine. The flow-meter head units add a bit to that but would probably pay for themselves in conserved water/salt pretty fast and you'd still be pretty well assured of having soft water when you need it.
Since your builder is already doing this kind of work now, you should be able to get a good system without spending too much. GET THE FILTERS! Do all this stuff now. Talk directly to the water guy your builder subcontracts with, get a good relationship with the plumbers who work on your place
FWIW, I have shutoffs and bypasses for my filters and the softeners. The softeners have built-in bypasses, but I want to have options because when (OK, OK..."IF"

) something goes wrong I want to be able to do whatever's necessary to keep the water flowing. And they make changing the filters, without making a wet mess, a breeze.
Oh, and it can pay to shop around for salt. The place I patronize now is the same vendor who supplies most of the local stores and gas stations that sell salt, and cutting out the middleman saves a bundle. That $13.32 bag of potassium chloride costs over $18 at the local grocery store and I also save a lot on regular salt.