spuddevans
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- Feb 25, 2008
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mklotz said:How about that! A control line locomotive. The airplane guys are gonna be sooo jealous.
Re distilled water...
Around here they sell mostly de-ionized water and one really has to look for distilled water. Since most of the mineral impurities in water are going to be in the form of ions, I suppose that de-ionized water is an ok substitute for distilled in a boiler but I'm willing to be corrected on that point.
I would avoid using De-Ionised water in your boiler at all. The reason for this is that the De-ionised water will leach the ions out of what it is contained in, namely your boiler, gradually weakening it.
I am a Clear Wall Maintainence Engineer ( a window cleaner ) and I use the "Brush-on-a-Stick" method of window cleaning and that uses gallons of de-ionised water which I produce myself via various filters and, finally some de-ionising resin.
What some of my fellow window cleaners have found in their water purification and filtering setups is a problem that came to light sometime after their installations. They had a short length of copper pipe going thru a wall that joined the de-ionising resin stage to the filtered water-storage positioned outside. What happened was that they noticed that after a couple of years of use the copper pipe developed several pin-hole leaks.
This was caused by the de-ionised water leaching out from the copped pipe.
Now this is not water under pressure, just under gravity.
Ok it took a couple of years for the copper pipe to leak, but imagine the risk to your precious boiler.
Tim