A general discussion and Q & A forum.
-
ritacrem
- Posts: 21
- Joined: 22 Aug 2015, 09:49
- Job Title: Lab Assistant
- School: Carroll College
- Suburb: Broulee
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by ritacrem » 14 Sep 2015, 09:47
Hi
We are looking at replacing our deioniser and I am looking for any suggested models- any recommendations?
Thanks heaps
Rita

-
sunray18
- Posts: 1487
- Joined: 14 Feb 2008, 12:30
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by sunray18 » 16 Sep 2015, 08:45
I have cartridges from Liquipro. 42/3 Kelso Crescent, Moorebank, Sydney. email
support@liquipro.com They cost $85 and last 250 litres.
-
Merilyn1
- Posts: 936
- Joined: 12 Mar 2013, 08:10
- Job Title: Labbie
- School: Wollondilly Anglican College
- Suburb: Tahmoor
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Merilyn1 » 16 Sep 2015, 11:06
We bought a Vertex under bench deioniser a few months ago. I'm really happy with it, has a pretty fast flow rate. I haven't had any complaints from the teachers, so I'm guessing all is good! It was a bit pricey - $1000, plus we had to get the plumber in to install it (not sure how much he charged), so that we could still use the tap over the sink. The replacement cartridges will cost about $200 but I should get over twelve months from each set.
If you're after a cheaper option, I did try the one from Scientrific. Much cheaper and the replacement filters were good value. However, to extend the life of the filters it does have a waste water outlet. So there is a fair bit of wasted water. If you're concerned about the expense and not worried about the waste water, this is also an option. We weren't happy with the water running down the sink, so returned the unit.
-
MissKat
- Posts: 68
- Joined: 24 Apr 2015, 11:41
- Job Title: Science Technician
- School: Cranbrook School
- Suburb: Bellevue Hill
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by MissKat » 18 Sep 2015, 09:08
I bought one from Scientrifric for about $400. It's reverse osmosis and pretty slow but works well if you don't need to fill up water bottles quickly.
It's under the sink and has a little tap to make the water flow. Had it for about 6 months and no issues. We don't use a lot of deionised water though.
-
ritacrem
- Posts: 21
- Joined: 22 Aug 2015, 09:49
- Job Title: Lab Assistant
- School: Carroll College
- Suburb: Broulee
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by ritacrem » 18 Sep 2015, 10:12
Thanks all for you replies...helps
Have a great holiday
RIta
-
Science10
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 01 Oct 2018, 14:20
- State/Location: VIC
Post
by Science10 » 09 Oct 2018, 10:26
I would like some direction/opinions on buying distilled water vs owning a water deioniser. What is recommended and why?
-
Labbie
- Posts: 2911
- Joined: 28 Nov 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Retired
- Suburb: At Home
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Labbie » 09 Oct 2018, 12:44
There is a thread on Deioniser water, I have put a bump too. as I can not merge topics any more. hope this helps you Science 10
Regards Labbie
Lab Manager/Lab Tech, mind reading etc etc
Now retired

-
Science10
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 01 Oct 2018, 14:20
- State/Location: VIC
Post
by Science10 » 09 Oct 2018, 13:53
Thankyou Sue, I will have a look at the thread...
-
Labbie
- Posts: 2911
- Joined: 28 Nov 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Retired
- Suburb: At Home
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Labbie » 14 Oct 2018, 15:24
The facts tells us the Distilled water is 99.9% pure, where as Deioniser Water is not. We always used Distilled water, purchased from Refresh in NSW.
Regards Labbie
Lab Manager/Lab Tech, mind reading etc etc
Now retired

-
Science10
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 01 Oct 2018, 14:20
- State/Location: VIC
Post
by Science10 » 15 Oct 2018, 14:50
That is a good point, Sue. Appreciate your suggestions!
-
Kathryn
- Posts: 307
- Joined: 01 Jun 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Lab Technician
- School: Cedars Christian College
- Suburb: Farmborough Hts, Wollongong
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Kathryn » 25 Oct 2018, 12:14
We have been using purchased "pure" water for some time after our reverse osmosis unit gave up. However we have found the pH of the bottled water is always low (eg between 5-6 and lower than tap water). I wonder if although it may be pure when it is bottled, it absorbs contaminates while it is stored. So we are now reconsidering if we need to go back to distilling our own.
-
Labbie
- Posts: 2911
- Joined: 28 Nov 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Retired
- Suburb: At Home
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Labbie » 25 Oct 2018, 13:03
During the Drought some years ago now, we were told NOT TO distill our own, too much waste of water. So we started to buy distilled water from Refresh NSW Silverwater. We have never looked back, this may come back into force with our current drought.
Regards Labbie
Lab Manager/Lab Tech, mind reading etc etc
Now retired

-
bigmack
- Posts: 394
- Joined: 15 Dec 2015, 10:49
- Job Title: Lab Assistant
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by bigmack » 25 Oct 2018, 19:15
I used one of these at a school I worked at last year . Its an Air Still . You fill it up with about 2 liters of water , turn it on and it just sits there all day dribbling out distilled water . After 4-5 hours it auto switches off . No cooling water required . It consumes about 350 watts.
So basically you get 2 Liters of distilled water a day for bugger all effort .
Airstill.jpg
Kathryn wrote: ↑25 Oct 2018, 12:14
However we have found the pH of the bottled water is always low (eg between 5-6 and lower than tap water). I wonder if although it may be pure when it is bottled, it absorbs contaminates while it is stored.
Kinda Kathryn . Becuase there are almost no minerals or ions in there it is easily altered . CO2 is absorbed from the air and makes it acidic . Even distilled water straight from the spout will turn universal indicator a yellow colour .
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
-
Kathryn
- Posts: 307
- Joined: 01 Jun 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Lab Technician
- School: Cedars Christian College
- Suburb: Farmborough Hts, Wollongong
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by Kathryn » 30 Oct 2018, 14:07
Hi Bigmack
So does distilled water pick up CO2 more easily that tap water? Tap water always has a pH closer to 7 than our bottled water.
-
bigmack
- Posts: 394
- Joined: 15 Dec 2015, 10:49
- Job Title: Lab Assistant
- State/Location: NSW
Post
by bigmack » 30 Oct 2018, 14:44
Tap water normally contains a lot of natural minerals depending on the source . Local municipals add chemicals at the water treatment stations to adjust the pH so it is close to 7.
And yes , because distilled water has no minerals in it , it is easily acidified by the CO2 in the air