In Central Florida, choosing a water treatment system requires a specific focus on the "triple threat" of local water: extreme hardness (calcium/magnesium), high chlorine/chloramine levels, and frequent sediment issues. New Life Water LLC addresses these using two primary system types, often utilizing the STO (Softener + Taste & Odor) combo technology. How New Life Water’s Components Work New Life Water utilizes a tiered approach to filtration. Depending on whether you choose a salt-based or salt-free setup, the components perform the following roles: Sediment Filter: The first line of defense. It catches physical debris like sand and silt—common in Florida’s aquifer—before it can clog the more sensitive carbon or softening media. CTO Carbon Block Filter: "CTO" stands for Chlorine, Taste, and Odor. This block uses compressed activated carbon to force water through tiny pores, removing the "pool-like" smell and chemical taste prevalent in Orlando’s municipal water. STO Combo Filter: This is the "heavy lifter." As an STO (Softener + Taste & Odor) unit, it typically uses a dual-chamber or dual-media design: Ion Exchange (Salt-Based): Physically removes calcium and magnesium ions to eliminate scale. Conditioning (Salt-Free): Uses TAC (Template Assisted Crystallization) to neutralize minerals so they don’t stick to pipes, without actually removing them from the water.
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