What is hard water—and what can you do about it?
How to test for water hardness and save your skin, your dishes, and your plumbing
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Hard water sounds like an oxymoron—or maybe just ice. But the “hard” inhard waterrefers to the minerals dissolved in it—usually calcium and magnesium. Soft water has very little of those minerals.
水的困难是什么?
Mineral-loaded hard water is common all over the United States, and it’s more of an issue where the water is sourced from the ground. Hard water is absolutely safe to drink, but if you have it piped into your home, hard water can affectyour appliances,your skin,your laundry, and yourplumbing fixtures.
You might encounterspots on your glassesor white deposits on your faucets or shower head. The minerals in the water can also make it harder to get yourself clean—calcium and magnesium bond with soap molecules to create soap scum, so your soap is less effective.
How to test for water hardness
Before you can do anything about hard water, you need to confirm that's the actual problem. While skin dryness, scale deposits, or spotty glasses are all tell-tale signs, they could be indicative of other problems. Here's how you can know for sure.
Test it yourself
For aninformal test, you can DIY.
1. Fill a cup or a jar with 12 ounces of tap water.
2. Add 10 drops of liquid soap (not detergent).
3. Attach the lid and shake or stir vigorously for a few seconds.
4. Look for suds at the top. If you have lots of bubbles at the top and clear water underneath, you have soft water, and you can stop testing.
5. If you don’t see thick suds, and the water underneath is cloudy, repeat the process, 10 drops of soap at a time, until you see foam. If it takes 40 drops of soap or more to raise some suds, you have hard or very hard water.
Buy test strips
Test stripscan give you results in as little as 15 seconds and can give you a more accurate measurement of the level of hardness in your water.
1. Take the strip out of the bag without touching the testing area.
2. Dip the strip in your tap water for a second or two.
3. Compare the color on the strip to the chart on the package.
Look it up online
Your municipality may have already done water testing.
1. Call your water company or visit your town or county water department website.
2. Check the levels of hardness in your water and recommendations on what, if anything, you should do about it.
How do I fix hard water?
Luckily, once you know you have hard water, there’s plenty you can do. You can deal with it on an individual level or throughout the home. Here are our suggestions.
Add Rinse Aid to your dishwasher
UsingRinse Aidin your dishwasher is a good starter solution for your hard water problem. It doesn’t actually soften the water, but it does help moisture run off the dishes, glasses, and flatware—if the water is able to drip off your dishes before it dries, it won't leave behind any cloudy mineral deposits.
Remove white scale deposits from plumbing fixtures
Use vinegar to attack the scale. It’s another short term solution—with hard water, the scale will come back over time.
Use dishwasher salt
Somehigh-end European dishwasher brandsoffer dishwasher salt to soften the water. Don’t count on throwing in a handful of table salt, though. Miele dishwashers, amongthe best we've tested, have special dispensers that youfill with their saltto keep your dishes spot free.
Install a whole-house water softener
Awater softeneris an appliance that works by exchanging the calcium and magnesium in hard water with the salt in sodium pellets. If you’re watching yoursalt intakeand don’t want to consume it in your drinking water, you can filter the faucet, have your water softener bypass the kitchen sink, or purchase a softener that works with potassium instead of sodium.
What's the upside?
Once you know that you have hard water, you can deal with it. One thing is certain: When you soften your water, your skin and hair will thank you, your plumbing and appliances will avoid scale, and your dishes and glasses will come out spot free.