The only time you see this is when an unscrupulous company is using a water softener as an iron filter.
Water hardness 15 grains per gallon.
Plus if your water contains iron you will need to add some additional hardness to it.
The hardness on the softener head settings panel is determined by the number of grains per gallon of water gpg.
Water hardness can be measured in gpg or ppm but gpg is the most commonly used measurement.
What is soft water.
A grain of water hardness is comparable to 1 7000th of a pound.
Water hardness conversion table ppm mmol l mg l french degrees german degrees grains per gallon degrees clark 1 is 0 0099 1 0 1 0 056 0 058 0 07 10 is 0 099 10 1 0 56 0 58 0 7 14 3 is 0 142 14 3 1 43 0 8 0.
400 gallons used per day x 15 grains per gallon hardness 6 000 grains of hardness must be removed daily.
Soft water is defined by american national standards nsf ansi 44 and nsf ansi 330 as water containing 1 grain of hardness per gallon or 17 1 mg l hardness.
Jumping mg l by 17 1 will change it to gpg.
For example if your water test shows 250 mg l hardness you actually have 14 62 grains per gallon.
Iron removal limitations will vary with water softener units.
If a test for hard water is measured in parts per million or milligrams per liter you can take the total hardness level and divide it by 17 1 to get hardness in grains per gallon.
Jumping mg l by 17 1 will change it to gpg.
You need a calculator to convert ppm to gpg using a conversion factor of 17 1.
To determine your daily hardness removal need multiply daily household water use measured in gallons by the hardness of the water measured in grains per gallon.
Beware of companies that tell you that each ppm of iron is equal to 4 5 grains per gallon of hardness.
Typically water that contains less than 1 grain per gallon is considered soft while.
Tap water may contain dozens of chemicals in addition to water.
Different agencies and organizations may use slightly different classifications when discussing water hardness.
Hardness is usually expressed in grains per gallon or ppm as calcium carbonate equivalent.
Grains per gallon is the business standard approach for talking about water hardness.