General Plumbing

How to Tell if You Have Hard Water

faucet

Some lucky homeowners have never experienced hard water in their homes. It’s largely a regional problem, with the hardest-hit areas in the Upper Midwest. But for those who live in a hard water zone, it can be one of the most annoying plumbing problems of them all. Hard water is tap water with an abnormally high mineral count. The reason this is a regional issue is that geographical features like thick limestone layers come into play; when groundwater bubbles up through these layers, it picks up traces of the minerals on its way to the municipal water supply. By the time it reaches your home’s faucet, the tap water has hardened.

Signs of Hard Water

Minerals like calcium, magnesium, iron, and even aluminum can give water attributes that make it unpleasant for drinking, unsuitable for washing, and damaging to household plumbing.

If you suspect you might have hard water, be on the lookout for these telltale signs:

  • Spotty dishes: Hard water makes it difficult to rinse away soap and detergent. Whether you hand-wash your dishes or use a dishwasher, your water hardness will play a role in your rinse cycle. Dishes rinsed in hard water often have chalky streaks and spots—the traces of soap left behind.
  • Soap scum: Just as soap clings to your dishes, it will stick to your tub, tile, and shower curtain. Soap scum can accumulate in shower areas with soft water too, but hard water will cause it to accumulate much faster.
  • Laundry problems: Hard water even makes it hard to rinse laundry detergent out of your clothes, and it can prematurely dull bright colors. Clothes washed in hard water often feel scratchy or stiff.
  • Troublesome showers: As if all those rinsing problems weren’t enough, you can’t even take a satisfying shower with hard water. The mineral deposits make it difficult to work up a lather, and equally difficult to rinse it away.
  • Dry skin: Because of the soapy film that hard water leaves behind in the shower, homeowners tend to experience dry skin problems when they shower in homes with hard water problems.
  • Funny taste: Some of the minerals found in hard water actually have health benefits, but there’s no benefit in the taste department. Hard water generally tastes or smells metallic, sulfuric, or sour.
  • Appliance damage: Those minerals deposits in your tap water will eventually build up on just about everything they touch, causing damage that can ruin an appliance. The pieces of equipment at risk of hard water damage include hot water heaters, refrigerator ice makers, dishwashers, and washing machines.

Do you think you have hard water? If so, your household plumbing could be taking on damage every day. Contact your licensed local plumbers for expert hard water testing and effective water softening solutions. Contact us online or call us today at 1-877-BEN-1776!

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