DENNERLE - Osmose Professional 190

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Price:
Sale priceDhs. 490.00 Regular priceDhs. 550.00

Description

  • Maximum output:
    190 l per day at 25 °C and pressure of 4 bar
  • Output under normal operating conditions:
    100–170 l per day at 10-15 °C and pressure of 3-6 bar
  • Retention rate: At least 95 %
  • Supplied ready for connection, incl. 3/4" tap adapter ("washing machine adapter")
  • Simple to use

Plus:
Increased membrane life and high continuous output thanks to flushing valve – removes performance-inhibiting deposits from the membrane

Simplicity itself to use:

  1. Connect hose to tap
  2. Turn tap slowly on
  3. The white hose supplies soft, high-purity osmosis water
  4. The hardened, impure residual water from the blue hose is drained off




 

 

 

Conditioning tap water may become necessary for several reasons. It may be too hard or too soft, or it may contain too many pollutants.
If the water is too soft, conditioning is easy: Just add the right amount of one of the re-mineralizing preparations presented here, and — presto, your 
water has the correct parameters. If the water is too hard you‘ll need a reverse osmosis system, or RO system. 

This is how it works: The pressure of the tap water presses the tiny water molecules through a micro membrane. The residual water retains all the 
other substances dissolved in the water: hardness builders, pollutants and other molecules. The RO water either is mixed with tap water until the 
desired parameters are reached, or it is optimized for aquarium use with remineralizing salts.

Tip: You can use residual water for watering or fertilizing your flowers, for example.

WHY IS REVERSE OSMOSIS CALLED REVERSED OSMOSIS? 

Osmosis is the term for the phenomenon that two liquids will always tend to equalize their concentration of ions through diffusion. If you separate two liquid with different ion concentrations with a membrane that only lets through water molecules (semipermeable), the water will always go from the lower concentration to the higher concentration. By using normal tap water pressure you can reverse this process — that‘s where the name 
„reverse osmosis“ comes from. Usually people use the abbreviation RO instead of „reverse osmosis“, as in „RO water“. 

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