I have to admit, buying a water softener is really one of life's less interesting purchases. Almost boring, and for the money you end up spending you'd hope for a little more enjoyment out of it. We got ours at sears. Our desire to buy one started because I had filled out a little card to win a car at a home show, not knowing that it was automatically giving my information to the local water softener services so they could pay you a visit, tell you how bad your water is and try to sign you up for their services. Places like Culligan and other such services. Now, for some people those are a fine deal and worth doing. For anyone who can handle the installation of their own unit and doesn't mind adding salt themselves (at only $4 a bag it's not bad) then you'd save a lot more money in the long run by just getting your own water softener and handling the maintenance yourself.
So we thanked the guys for telling us our water was too hard, although they couldn't come up with any impurities because our town water is actually pretty good. Then we researched various water softener reviews and went to various home improvement stores the next weekend and priced out our options. We spent about $320 on a decent water softener that would hold about 5-6 bags of salt and that would last about 6-8 months. So instead of paying $20 a month for the professional service plus the unit cost (slightly reduced I think), we could pay $24 for salt every 6-8 months. Seemed like a no brainer to me.
They said it would reduce the amount of soap we needed when washing dishes and clothes and that we'd notice it in the shower when the soap got foamier. To that aspect I think they were right. So it is saving us a bit on soap, which helps even more.
For more information on water softener reviews please visit our website: http://www.watersoftenersguide.com
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