jzh Posted January 9, 2021 Share Posted January 9, 2021 Hi i'm using a lot of insteon leak sensors, they work great. But it can't detect filtered pure water leakage, how do you modify it to make it works? i had thought to lay a thin layer of salt under it thanks Link to comment
larryllix Posted January 10, 2021 Share Posted January 10, 2021 (edited) Baking soda or just put the sensor on a concrete or other porous surface. Test it on a paper towel. Edited January 10, 2021 by larryllix Link to comment
Brian H Posted January 10, 2021 Share Posted January 10, 2021 Salt may eventually corrode the sensing pads or maybe do a false wet condition. If the salt absorbs some moisture from the air. 1 Link to comment
Techman Posted January 11, 2021 Share Posted January 11, 2021 You might try this experiment: soak a piece of paper in salt water, then let it dry out. After it's dry place it under the leak sensor. If the paper gets wet due to a leak it should trigger the sensor. Link to comment
jzh Posted January 11, 2021 Author Share Posted January 11, 2021 Great ideas, thank you all! Link to comment
jtara92101 Posted April 7, 2021 Share Posted April 7, 2021 (edited) Haha, so you want to know if your R/O system leaks. Must be RO/DI. I get about 15ppm out of the RO (with permeate pump) and 1ppm after two stages of DI. Then re-mineralization cartridge to the little faucet and fridge. I have a valve and tube I can use to draw DI water for mixing up household cleaning solution, plants, etc. It's suitable for a reef tank (which I don't have, no fishies in my high-rise condo, no thank you) and in fact I purchased from a company that specializes in that use. (Reef tanks and saltwater aquariums best practice is go as close to 0 as possible, then add suitable minerals. I actually know somebody who has a business maintaining reef tanks. He was on an episode of Tanked!) Edited April 7, 2021 by jtara92101 Link to comment
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