Humidifier question

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Depends on the humidifier. If it's a consumer-grade product, RO should be fine. Some commercial humidifiers must have distilled, 0 ppm TDS water. You'd have to have a major greenhouse operation to justify one of those.
 
Humidifier

It's a single room humidifier I got at RiteAid. My TDS of the R/O water is 0 ppm. I have about a dozen orchids so it is sufficient at raising the humidity. I just wasn't sure about the R/O water causing problems with the humidifier.
 
I have ran tap water (TDS +/- 300) for 2 years in my rite aid ultrasonic humidifier and have had no problems. Don't let it run dry.... That when the minerals will build up.
 
Distilled and RO are fully equivalent (as long as the RO is working).

The only downside of using pure water (instead of a chlorinated tap water) is that you will eventually get a lot of biofouling on the pads or wicks.

I think most pad or wick type humidifiers recommend adding a drop or two of bleach to the sump periodically to kill any biofilms (that will shorten the life of the wicks).

Using a crusty tap water or well water will generate some pretty crusty wicks in short order. So I also use RO in my humidifiers 99% of the time then occasionally run some chlorinated tap water through to kill the slime.
 
Tyrone - Depending upon the membrane used, the output from an RO system will contain from roughly 1%-7% of the incoming TDS. Rarely will it be zero.

Keith - if you are using 300 ppm water in an ultrasonic unit, aren't the minerals carried in the droplets depositing a white film throughout the room?
 

Latest posts

Back
Top