Address: 507 W Gannon Pl, Escondido, CA 92025, USA
Phone: +17607460166
Sunday: Closed
Monday: 7:30AM–4:30PM
Tuesday: 7:30AM–4:30PM
Wednesday: 7:30AM–4:30PM
Thursday: 7:30AM–4:30PM
Friday: 7:30AM–4:30PM
Saturday: Closed
Elizabeth Beaver
Great service, great product, friendly staff. I love my reverse osmosis system. I never have to buy bottled water for myself or do any treatment before watering my plants.
Chinmaya Panda
We leased a reverse osmosis and they gave us a very good deal. The supervisor was very professional and answered all our questions. We got it installed within a week and the installer was on time, knowledgeable, professional. I recommend them highly. The taste of water is great. So far so good.
Namita Singh
The support team (Donna, Wanda, Jesse...) is really old-school, they truly care about the customer's needs! We travel, therefore, our salt delivery schedule varies, and the Culligan team makes it happen, every time, I love them:)
John Wiedner
First off Joe my salesman was very nice. The tank exchange is such an awesome innovation in water softeners. franklin my installer was the nicest guy who you can tell really take pride in his work and is very knowledgeable about the product and communicates very well with the process. Can't say enough good things about Colligan of Escondido
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Typically the tanks are placed in the garage or on the side of the house. Most of the time the Culligan technicians have access through: gate, garage opener, PIN, etc.
Filtered water typically refers to water that has gone through a filtration process to reduce the amount of iron, hydrogen sulfide, aesthetic chlorine taste or odor, as well as microorganisms such as cryptosporidium and giardia. Water filtration involves separating mineral particles, like particulates, iron, hydrogen sulfide, or organic matter, from the water molecule (H2O). By passing water through a "filter bed," or "media bed," these granular particles are trapped, allowing the cleaner water to pass through.
Refrigerator filters are typically just carbon, and while carbon filtered water is better than no treatment at all, it is limited in what it can remove. Only reverse osmosis is capable of removing dissolved minerals and chemicals from your water.
Yes - The system uses multiple processes including Reverse Osmosis to make great tasting, low sodium drinking water. Reverse Osmosis removes about 97% of the TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) including salt and sodium from the water. Read the labels on bottled water and you will discover Reverse Osmosis is the same process used by most bottlers ... so in effect ... you really are getting ... "bottled water ... without the bottle".
Reverse osmosis is a sophisticated multi-stage filtration system that is capable of removing up to 97% of all the dissolved minerals from your water. It is designed to make water that is at least as good as the water you buy in bottles. Many times, it’s even better. This reduces waste in landfills by using less bottled water, making reverse osmosis environmentally friendly.
Unfortunately, no. A water softener is designed to remove hardness (calcium and magnesium) from water. They can sometimes remove a limited amount of iron and manganese if you happen to have these problems as well. But if you are looking for great water for drinking and cooking, you should probably consider a reverse osmosis system for that purpose.
Yes, if your hard water has been building up calcium in your appliances, once you install a softener it will begin to remove that built-up scale. It will take a long time to remove it, but it will remove it.
Hard water usually manifests itself in several ways. It leaves white residue behind wherever water evaporates. When hardness reacts with soaps and detergents, it leaves a sticky soap scum behind, and in hot water heating systems, it leaves behind a hard scale.
A water softener works through a process known as “ion exchange,” which means that as it removes calcium and magnesium (elements that make water “hard”), it replaces those ions on a one for one basis, usually with sodium. This means that the amount of sodium added to the water is directly proportional to how hard your water is. In most instances, the amount being added is so small that it is not a significant contributor to the amount of sodium in your diet.
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