WATER SOFTENERS - water softener effect on drinking water and on septic systems.
SepticAPedia ©
- Water softener impact on septic systems
- What problems may be caused by water softener salt or water loading of the septic tank and drainfields?
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SALT OR WATER INTO SEPTIC - Will the Water Softener Salt or Water Volume Damage the Septic System?
At HEALTH RISKS we introduced possible health concerns for salt added to drinking water by a water softener. Some septic system experts assert that salt discharged into the leach field is an important factor in shortening the life of the
biomat which forms below the leach field (to treat effluent as part of the sanitizing process for septic effluent).
Certainly high levels of salt can kill septic tank or drainfield bacteria.
But a normally-operating water softener is unlikely to harm the septic system.
We start by agreeing that a malfunctioning water softener may damage a septic system in two ways:
- Water volume in Septic Fields from Water Softeners: The normal water softener backwash cycle is less than 100 gallons and is not a major source of daily water usage
at a property (see "Determining Needed Septic Capacity" at "More Reading" below).
If the timer or valve gets stuck in the "backwash-on" cycle (which I have seen happen), the system will run continuously and
will flood the septic leach field. This is discussed in "Clogged Drain Diagnosis" referenced at "More Reading" below.
- Salt dose of Sodium and Chloride in Groundwater from Water Softeners: Part of the water softener backwash water contains no extra salt.
During an interval of backwash however, some water may be quite salty, perhaps 5,000 ppm to 10,000 ppm.
If the salt dose (which is also adjustable on many water softeners) is set incorrectly high excessive salt may
be discharged into the septic system where it may damage the leach field and its biomat.We encountered this condition at a property
where the owner had first set the salt dose to the maximum and then set the backwash frequency to a maximum as well, when
neither was needed for the level of hardness of the water.
A Michigan DES study of community wastewater treatment systems (not private septic systems)
reported that sodium and chloride in the soil at their discharge sites greatly exceeded federal drinking
water limits. This point needs more research since it's not clear that groundwater is required to
meet drinking water standards - this is a shortcoming of the Michigan article.
The article continued to cite 120 m/l for sodium and 250 m/l for chloride as the maximum allowable levels
in groundwater. (See "Sodium and Chloride and Water Softeners" at "More Reading".) On further research I will update
this section.
- Water softener salt at normal levels will not kill septic tank bacteria
Normally the water softener salt and chloride should not be a problem for the septic system:
One of my clients is a biochemist who specializes in studying septic bacteria.
His opinion was that in a normally-working
home water softener system the level of water softener-produced salt in the septic tank was so diluted by other water flowing
into the tank that in his experience it never reached a level that was harmful to septic tank bacteria.
I'm not sure if this
same conclusion applies to bacteria in the drainfield biomat. Gayman and others have conducted reserarch on salts in drainfield soils and their role in drainfield life.
Normally water softener water volume should not be a problem for the septic system.
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WATER SOFTENERS
DETECT HARD WATER
MEASURE WATER HARDNESS
HOW SOFTENERS WORK
HEALTH RISKS
SALT OR WATER INTO SEPTIC
REDUCE IMPACT OF SOFTENER SOFTENER ADJUSTMENT & CLEANING
OTHER SOFTENER METHODS
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