How to Install a Reverse Osmosis Water Filter | Ask This Old House

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2022
  • In this video, This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey removes the impurities, VOCs, and excess minerals from water with a simple reverse osmosis water filter system.
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    Plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey heads on a house call to help a homeowner with a water issue. After the homeowner explains that she’s had a problem keeping aquarium fish alive, Richard surveys the plumbing system and comes up with a solution: a reverse osmosis water filter.
    Difficulty: ⅖
    Cost: Around $200
    Time: 4 hours
    Where to find it?
    Richard installs a water filter ( OptimH2O® Reverse Osmosis + Claryum® [amzn.to/39RcZ4z]) under a sink. After turning off the cold water by turning the valve under the sink, he disconnects the cold-water line with a wrench. Richard then installs the brass "T" by hand screwing it to the cold-water line. The system comes with white ¼" and ⅜" tubing to connect the filtration cartridges and water tank to the water supply. Using a hand drill, Richard makes holes on the manifold to add mounting screws.
    Richard removes an old sprayer hose from the sink to install a dedicated system faucet. He uses the ⅜" and ¼" red tubing to connect to the cartridges and the water tank. Richard positions the connector above the trap and drills a 7/32" hole into the drainpipe. He checks that all tubes are fully pushed in before turning the cold water supply back on.
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    Tools:
    Adjustable wrench [amzn.to/3GnzMkP]
    Pencil or marker [amzn.to/3lFmjvb]
    Screwdriver [amzn.to/3LKOhQA]
    Drill [amzn.to/3wJ1g14]
    About Ask This Old House TV:
    From the makers of This Old House, America’s first and most trusted home improvement show, Ask This Old House answers the steady stream of home improvement questions asked by viewers across the United States. Covering topics from landscaping to electrical to HVAC and plumbing to painting and more. Ask This Old House features the experts from This Old House, including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor. ASK This Old House helps you protect and preserve your greatest investment-your home.
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    How to Install a Reverse Osmosis Water Filter | Ask This Old House
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Komentáře • 73

  • @cowcabobizle
    @cowcabobizle Před 2 lety +18

    Always awesome to see Richard explain plumbing!

  • @taoyen1579
    @taoyen1579 Před 2 lety +10

    How to Install a Reverse Osmosis Water Filter: Done in 1 minute, the other 7 minutes was just explaining the house and water tests. Got it!

  • @RatKindler
    @RatKindler Před 2 lety +21

    Would have liked to see the resulting water tested too. Also, couldn't they have just adjusted the pH of the water before adding the fish instead of going the reverse osmosis route? Aren't you supposed to do that for tropical fish anyway?

  • @wilsonxyz92
    @wilsonxyz92 Před 2 lety +13

    She also need to aerate the water first before she put the water into the aquarium. It's not the chlorine since it's well water, but because the dissolved oxygen level from the well water is very low.

  • @kellyrjohnson7693
    @kellyrjohnson7693 Před 2 lety +45

    For all we know they never properly cycled the tank and there's zero bacteria available to reduce ammonia. I'd like to think they tested for that before going assuming it's a pH issue. Not that it can't be, but fishkeeping often involves a lot of patience and prep before just buying fish, tossing them into a tank and wondering why they're dead in a day.

    • @ellisjohnson6917
      @ellisjohnson6917 Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed

    • @benjones8977
      @benjones8977 Před 2 lety +2

      A cheaper way might be just to buy the zerowater jug and see if this doesn’t work first. I’ve checked the pH balance through this and it works better than any other I found.
      It probably won’t get rid of the dangerous toxins, but most everything else will be clear & clean.

    • @OutlawFirebird1
      @OutlawFirebird1 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah especially if they been trying to keep angel fish, they need a bigger tank and really need at least a few of them. That looks like a five gallon, possibly 10. Way too small. Looks like it was a kit that you get from a local store. Those are generally not very good. Better to buy everything separately depending on what fish you want to keep.

    • @Virxo182
      @Virxo182 Před 2 lety

      You could be correct. I remember using a dozen goldfish to prime the initial setup of water and discarding them for the next batch of fish. After that the tank was siphon filtered and we only took about 20% of the water out at a time once a month and worked just fine.

    • @avimenachem1064
      @avimenachem1064 Před 2 lety +1

      They need something like Amquel/Prime, even if they are using RO water, to help detoxify ammonia, etc. Also, anyone keeping sensitive aquatic pets should check with their water company (assuming they don’t use well water exclusively) for which chemicals are added. Chloramines are becoming more popular due to their more stable nature, but they quickly destroy carbon filters and then begin killing beneficial bacteria in the aquariums. The dechlorinators listed above detoxify that as well.

  • @stevehowe209
    @stevehowe209 Před 2 lety +7

    One thing I would have done differently is install the RO system in the mechanical room and then run lines to the basement sink and the kitchen sink as well as any refrigerator icemaker‘s you have. This way you get the RO water at multiple locations throughout the house and just not one. I’ve had an RO system for over 30 years. One of the best investment a homeowner can make.

    • @morlamweb
      @morlamweb Před 2 lety +1

      In this case, the RO system was just for one faucet, which is clearly in a wet bar in a secondary room of the house, not the primary kitchen nor in the bathrooms. They link the water after it's already gone through their existing filtration/treatment systems, they just need to treat the water in that room to make it compatible with the fish.

    • @AequitasSaints
      @AequitasSaints Před 4 měsíci

      But how could any volume keep up with that? Say two fixtures are being used at the same time.

  • @geomodelrailroader
    @geomodelrailroader Před 2 lety

    good to see this I will need to install one of these

  • @Silky_boi
    @Silky_boi Před 2 lety +3

    Ok this is crazy I just saw the older video of Richard installing an RO system!?

  • @HAMRADIOJOE4178
    @HAMRADIOJOE4178 Před 2 lety

    love having richard here

  • @CARLOSTREUIL
    @CARLOSTREUIL Před 2 lety +6

    We had a 10 gallon aquarium for years with a bottom under gravel filter. We changed the water every few months. We purchased 2.5 gallon carboys of drinking water and just dumped it into the tank. The fish loved it and lived forever. Much cheaper and less complicated. The drinking water had been run through an RO unit.

    • @demagab
      @demagab Před 2 lety +1

      They sell reverse osmosis water in pet stores. We use that, mixed with 50% tap water... the water is also cheap, but sure it's more convenient if you have it from the tap

    • @divinecomedian2
      @divinecomedian2 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes, but did you get to star in a TOH video?

  • @elitedragon2732
    @elitedragon2732 Před 2 lety

    So useful 🥊

  • @chibbyylol
    @chibbyylol Před 2 lety +3

    Guys the faucet is there so they can drink it as well lol; don’t think it’s ONLY for the fishies

  • @geeoye
    @geeoye Před 4 dny

    TOH team, thanks for detailed explanation of the RO system. Can you do another review on one of the newer tankless RO systems. Per their marketing, that saves lots of water and more efficient than the legacy 5 or 7-stage system. Thanks as always.

  • @MickS77
    @MickS77 Před 2 lety +5

    Fish should not be kept in pure RO water, they need minerals to properly osmoregulate. When keeping tropical fish its much better to find fish that will thrive in YOUR water. Fish will adapt to stable, consist water parameters. In the case of this homeowner, high ph and high hardness would be perfect for African Cichlids or Livebearing fish.

  • @mariebee3146
    @mariebee3146 Před rokem

    Where did you get that faucet? I love that it's a duel faucet.

  • @SlackerU
    @SlackerU Před 2 lety +3

    Interesting but we didn't test-strip the RO water.

  • @No.............
    @No............. Před 2 lety +2

    It's probably ammonia that's killing the fish, not the minerals.
    1st absolutely crucial rule of aquarium keeping is to establish the nitrogen cycle so that ammonia waste from the fish is detoxified by bacteria into nitrate, which won't kill the fish unless it is allowed to build up to toxic levels, don't get fish until it is established.
    RO water without minerals is also bad for fish because they also need minerals.
    Bacteria and plants will also naturally "soften" the water as they consume the minerals.
    or just get fish that like hard water, like guppies, platies, swordtails, or mollies. (Livebearers).

  • @skull20003
    @skull20003 Před 2 lety +1

    did she use soap to clean the fish tank? soap sinks into the rubber between the glass connections

  • @dipeshnayyar578
    @dipeshnayyar578 Před 6 dny

    That plumming is out of this world should belong in the muisuim

  • @JohnAranita
    @JohnAranita Před 2 lety

    You must buy API Quick Start or Tetra Safe Start. Both have bacteria that when you introduce the bacteria in the aquarium water, the biological filter is immediately started. The bacteria consumes ammonia and nitrate, which are harmful to fish.

  • @MandoFettOG
    @MandoFettOG Před 2 lety +3

    Wouldn't it be easier to just buy a few Gallons from the store?? How often do you change the tank water??

  • @bellinghambaseball2
    @bellinghambaseball2 Před 2 lety

    Muriatic Acid?

  • @johndoe6032
    @johndoe6032 Před rokem +1

    Confused by his comment at the end. The filters will fill the tank in 1-3 hours, but he said the water won't be clean for 24 hours. What is happening with the water sitting in the tank between 1-3 hours and 24 hours?

  • @kcgcw00
    @kcgcw00 Před 2 lety

    Interested to know what RO system this is?

    • @arthendrickson4860
      @arthendrickson4860 Před 2 lety

      I believe the RO system is described in the video’s description.

  • @nealbutler66
    @nealbutler66 Před 2 lety +3

    That’s a big upgrade for such a small tank. Also that tank is too small for that tank I think.

  • @bettymaverick1098
    @bettymaverick1098 Před 2 lety +2

    The aquarium does not look like a Nitrogen cycle has been completed. The aquarium needs it biological system to be alive and complete, Putting all new water in and adding fish is a situation doomed to fail. Do some research on the Nitrogen cycle before buying an aquarium and add fish. It takes several weeks before you can add fish.

  • @eyehear10
    @eyehear10 Před 2 lety

    Nobody:
    That lady: Yes

  • @diyenthusiast7458
    @diyenthusiast7458 Před 2 lety +1

    TOH: Can you please also provide a link to the water test kit that was used in the video ?

    • @moringsdaughter
      @moringsdaughter Před 2 lety +1

      Just get the API test kit. Don't use those quick strips, they're useless.

  • @davedube1148
    @davedube1148 Před 2 lety +5

    The reason the fish died is because the filter has not had enough time to be "seeded" with bacteria to remove the ammonia in the water which the fish produce from their waste. It takes 4 weeks to seed a filter. Buy hearty fish like Zebra Danio's to survive the 4 week period. I have a 30 gallon aquarium for a long time and learned the hard way that filters need time to accumulate enough bacteria to remove the ammonia. The other water problems can be fixed easily with chemical additives available at the fish store.

  • @DylanSalacia
    @DylanSalacia Před 2 lety

    lol these fish better be grateful

  • @OutlawFirebird1
    @OutlawFirebird1 Před 2 lety +2

    Really small tank and poor filtration for an angel fish.

  • @jrm2383
    @jrm2383 Před 2 lety

    Hey Richard! Cutting the sprayer will cause water to spray from the hose when the faucet is turned on. Someone inexperienced following your instructions is in for a surprise. You reassemble the sprayer under the sink.

  • @insidethegardenwall22
    @insidethegardenwall22 Před 2 lety +1

    Now the fish is happy but what about the water they drink from the whole house filtration? Wasn’t it tested to be a bit hard and basic?

  • @iuyozx
    @iuyozx Před 2 lety +3

    That angelfish was stressed. Observe gills. This woman is clueless about fish keeping.

  • @BB99234KJ
    @BB99234KJ Před 2 lety

    Doesn’t reverse osmosis waste gallons of water just to make a “clean” gallon?

  • @htc148
    @htc148 Před 2 lety +2

    this is just throwing money at the problem. not actually finding a cause and a solution. install is legit but it wont necessarily be the solution

  • @anthonyfigueroa7869
    @anthonyfigueroa7869 Před 2 lety +1

    All that money for pet fish!!!!WOW.

  • @chosen2030
    @chosen2030 Před 4 měsíci

    All that money spent on finishing the basement and installing the R/O system, but such a sad looking little fish tank. No thermostat on the heater, stick on thermometer, poor lighting, I'm guessing the HOB had a disposable carbon filter, almost no hiding spots to help the fish feel safe... the water parameters are not the only reason the fish are dying.

  • @moringsdaughter
    @moringsdaughter Před 2 lety

    That's not how those test strips work... They're not super great, but at least read the instructions.

  • @loumonte658
    @loumonte658 Před 2 lety +1

    Another fish story.

  • @scottwolverine3062
    @scottwolverine3062 Před 2 lety

    she wears the pants! did you see her about to let richard have it after telling her to get that fish to safety, before he got the hell outta there? haha. Kids we cant have fish! our water isnt good to keep them alive

  • @jamespellegriniii3183
    @jamespellegriniii3183 Před 8 měsíci

    Okay you isntalled your system. That'll be $500

  • @tjvaichus
    @tjvaichus Před 2 lety

    Why didn’t they send out a water sample for a more accurate reading? Also, if they liked the way the water tastes why not just buy water for the fish tank like distilled or spring water

  • @jungleviper
    @jungleviper Před 2 lety

    Those reverse osmosis systems are for people who barely use any water.

    • @jrm2383
      @jrm2383 Před 2 lety

      Totally the opposite

  • @jragadio
    @jragadio Před 2 lety

    Expensive solution for .25 cent fish

  • @johnc6539
    @johnc6539 Před 2 lety +1

    No way I'm spending that amount of money to install an RO system, just so I can have fish. Sorry.

    • @johnc6539
      @johnc6539 Před 2 lety

      @J G u can't be serious. LOL

    • @leehancock2782
      @leehancock2782 Před 2 lety

      Undersink ro isn't expensive

    • @robertf6344
      @robertf6344 Před 2 lety

      We have it for clean water to drink. The RO filter is expensive though.

    • @johnc6539
      @johnc6539 Před 2 lety

      @@leehancock2782 When I priced them YEARS ago they were $1500.

    • @dylan-nguyen
      @dylan-nguyen Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnc6539 it’s like $350 at Costco now and $100 (total) for the filters