HYDRO-MAX Electronic Water Conditioner = Clean Tech Water Treatment
- No salt
- No chemicals
- No maintenance
- No Scale
Biofilms and Scale deposits inside pipes, valves, and tubes pose serious environmental problems that present themselves as health hazards and high energy costs. Even clean municipal water will eventually form biofilms and scale.
Scale deposits (aka fouling, calcium, minerals, calcite, limescale, water hardness) inside pipes and equipment provide a huge surface area for biological growth, far beyond the interior surface area of un-scaled clean pipes. While most of the bacteria that forms biofilms are not hazardous or toxic, others like Legionella and E.coli can be deadly.
Biofilms that form on scale deposits can be greatly reduced by preventing scale in the first place and by removing it gradually if already formed.
Scale deposits narrow the interior diameters of pipes, thereby decreasing pressure and flow, and, in the case of heat exchangers, require higher amounts of costly energy to transfer through the scale. Water heaters require higher amounts of gas and electricity, which is costly and wasteful.
Physical Water Treatment (P.W.T.) is a Clean Technology that draws very little electricity itself, is controlled by a circuit board, and is very dependable. Any malfunction can be fixed by simply exchanging a new circuit board.
No plumbing is required for the Hydromax EWC Installation is simple and requires no technical expertise.
The Hydro-Max EWC incorporates physical water treatment principles and is far-advanced from other simpler and less effective electro-magnetic devices on the market. The Hydromax device is effective on a very wide range of water hardness up to 70+ grains per gallon or 1,200 ppm. Other products are not that effective, reliable or cost-effective.
An important benefit of the Hydro-Max EWC, when it is fitted upstream from water purification systems like ultra-violet and reverse-osmosis devices, is that it will improve the performance and require less maintenance of those systems. It is important to note that the Hydro-Max EWC is not itself a water purification device.
We stand by the quality of our products. For that reason alone, the Hydro-Max Electronic Water Conditioner comes with a six-month money-back performance guarantee and a five-year manufacturer's warranty
The Hydro-Max Electronic Water Conditioner
is a "physics-based water conditioning system" that prevents
scale deposits from precipitating from hard water. It does not add or
remove minerals from the water and it uses no salt or chemicals.
The Hydro-Max Electronic Water Conditioner produces a
complex, modulating high frequency waveform to physically alter and neutralize
the sharp, barbed and interlaced crystalline structure of calcium carbonate
and magnesium carbonate molecules in hard water. The result is a change
in the natural tendency of the hard water minerals to precipitate, bind
to one another and adhere to the walls of everything they come into contact
with. The calcium carbonate and magnesium carbonate subsequently stay
in solution and are flushed out with the normal discharge of the water.
Existing scale deposits are gradually broken up and are flushed out as
well.
Babies
and children under 11 years old should have less salt than adults, because
they are smaller.
How much salt should babies have?
Babies need only a very small amount of salt - less than 1g a day up to 12 months. Their kidneys can't cope with larger amounts of salt.
Babies who are breastfed will get the right amount of salt through breast milk. Infant formula contains a similar amount.
How much salt should children have?
The daily recommended maximum for
children depends on their age:
1 to 3 years - 2 g salt a day (0.8g sodium)
4 to 6 years - 3g salt a day (1.2g sodium)
7 to 10 years - 5g salt a day (2g sodium)
11 and over - 6g salt a day (2.5g sodium)
If you're buying processed foods, even those aimed at children, remember to check the information given on the labels so you can choose those with less salt.
Remember there is no need to add salt to your child's food.
If children have too much salt, this could affect their health in the future. And it could also give them a taste for salty food, which means they're more likely to continue eating too much salt when they grow up.
See Understanding labels to find out more about how to tell how much
salt is in a food.