So my 20ml test tubes and sodium bicarbonate have arrived and I put 250mg of sodium bicarbonate into my 5l of zero water on Friday.

Just done a 20ml KH test which took 8 drops to turn the water yellow which gives a 35.8mg /l for alkalinity. Would this be close enough or should I add a tiny smidge more?

GH turned green after 2 drops so hardness is 8.95 mg/l. Do I need to worry about adding anything for more hardness?

Can’t edit my post, but I weighed out a little more sodium bicarbonate - 70mg, (which was what it took for the scales to pick up the measurement) and I’ve added this in. Based on adding 250mg to 5l which took me to 35.8 mg/l, this should comfortably bring me above 40 mg/l for alkalinity (35.8 / 250) x 320 = 45.8

Hell’s teeth, I’m just upgrading from a Sage BE, I’m getting an ACS Minima and a Niche grinder, the thought of spending so much is making me sweat slightly but I’ve been consoling myself by thinking how much nicer my coffee experience will be.

But wait, now I find water, something I’d hitherto naively thought was the stuff of life, is actually the stuff of death for my new Minima. So, more sweating it seems, and more questions.

I think @DavecUK uses an RO machine, from reading this thread I think @Rob1 uses a distilled water machine, and then quite a number of people are going for bottled water - and each of those methods involve additions of potassium or sodium bicarb to balance things. Would any brave soul like to summarise the pros & cons of each approach please?
[Link to My Brain Hurts by Monty Python]

Bottled water.

Pros: It requires no extra equipment or investment.

Cons: It’s expensive (relatively). You don’t have control and rely on consistency when inconsistency is pretty much guaranteed. Lots of plastic waste. No matter what you do you’re not going to stop scaling in the service boiler without a lot of water waste.

Distilled.

Pros: Absolute control and consistency.

Cons: Takes time. Not the most cost effective method. Requires extra equipment.

RO

PRos: On demand. Most convenient. Good at removing most things from water. Can run with remineralisation in line so no faffing around adding things.

Cons: Less consistency than distilled, varies based on the water put through it. The filters need replacing periodically so there is an ongoing cost. Large (comparatively) upfront cost. Needs counter space or undersink space.

Tap water:

Pros: It’s…on tap.

Cons: Variable quality. Will have stuff in it you don’t want in your machine or your drinks e.g nitrate, chlorine etc, some of it can be removed with filters but not all.

Zero water jug:

Pros: Low up-front cost. Highly effective filters. Can be mixed with tap water to bring alkalinity and hardness.

No option is perfect.

Retested my water today after adding the additional sodium bicarbonate. It was 10 drops until the 20ml of water turned yellow = 179 /4 = 44.75 mg/l. Think my water is good to go just in time for Minima delivery tomorrow.

I should also say a huge thanks to @Rob1, @LMSC & @MWJB for their advice and spoon feeding this imbecile through all of this. I was worried I’d be returning the Minima under the grounds of being too stupid to own one for a while there lol.

    dutchy101 Glad it is working out for you. Every one requires assistance. You are not alone! 😊

    Can I ask a water related question (without starting a new thread).

    What is the best way to improve water quality from the tap without using bottled water? (No budge on that wife is adamant) Or is there even any point?

    My water quality is surprisingly good (or so I’m told by someone on another forum) 38.7 - max 140 with an average reading of 75.6 CaCO3 m/l taken from 10 samples. (40-80mg/L alkalinity they said)

      Frothbewithyou Your water seems pretty good, if you wanted to monitor it & keep it in a certain range you could either filter it with/cut it with BWT Mg+ filtered water if necessary.

      Best to ascertain what it actually is with a drop kit.

      Frothbewithyou It’s worth mentioning there’s a lot of other stuff in tapwater that ideally needs removing. Chlorine, Flouride, particulates, sometimes the river water smell. Quality varies throughout the year.

      I’ll invest in a drop kit and go from there 💪👌

      7 days later

      @DavecUK

      Do you keep the mineralisation catridge on the Osmio Zero? Like in your case, it feeds the coffee machine, serves the kitchen and drinking. The catridge improves the taste of the RO as a drinking water.

        LMSC You’ve just asked a very timely question and similar to what I was looking for. I’ve had a chat with the friendly people at Osmio who recommended the zero after stating my needs as was also looking at under sink filtration. Would I need to do anything to the water coming out of the zero or can I just pour straight into my Minima?

        We use a Brita filter jug for our drinking water and go through maybe ⅚ larger drinking bottles of water a day so want it to be for drinking water/juice as well as the Minima, despite the wife thinking I only care about my coffee machine now and not our health lol. I’m hoping the mineralisation cartridge would be sufficient as really want a hands-off water solution. I’d like to not be on bottled water for long term with plastic wasteage and all that jazz.

          LMSC Do you keep the mineralisation catridge on the Osmio Zero? Like in your case, it feeds the coffee machine, serves the kitchen and drinking. The catridge improves the taste of the RO as a drinking water.

          I do, it doesn’t add back much…but it’s enough.

          Alexvs

          I am currently using a zero water filter jug, which I suspect will give the same water as reverse osmosis. I am adding some sodium bicarbonate to raise the alkalinity. I am adding 320mg to 5 litres of zero water which brings the alkalinity into the right zone (I think it is suggested you need to add something like 67mg of sodium bicarbonate per litre of zero water if you wanted to make up less.

            dutchy101 That’s a bit too much work for me and the wife already thinks I’ve lost it and obsessed with coffee. She’ll give in to the zero I think as read lots of users who just use the mineralisation filter and are happy with the water.

            dutchy101 The Zerowater jug takes pretty much everything out of the water, more than RO (unless the RO is followed by DI resin filter). But it is much, much slower.

            dutchy101

            Interesting recipe!

            I use tap water (250 TDS before filtering), the Zero filter and an 8L Kilner jar with a metal tap. I add 0.7g of Sodium Bicarbonate per 8 litres (0.0875g/L) and 1.6g of magnesium per 8L (0.2g/L), this gives me a TDS of around 110 (my aim is to stay between 100 & 140). Water tastes great for drinking and coffee, I arrived to the amount of Sodium Bicarbonate and Magnesium by adjusting until it tasted right to me (& my better half). We’re two in the house and the jug will last about 3-4 days, Zero filter lasts about 20-25 days.