Not looking to hijack this thread, but maybe someone can tell me why almost all the systems use 10" blocks instead of 20"? The only downside I can think of off the top of my head is the increased footprint of a system with 20" cartridges. Everything I've ever read stresses contact time for the carbon blocks to do their job, especially when it comes to breaking the chloramine bond. Common sense says that doubling the block size doubles the contact time. Wouldn't 20" blocks would last twice as long, if not longer? And, I'd think one would have more of a "buffer" to catch chlorine break through. The price difference between the two is pretty much 1 to 1 (20" the same as, or a little more than double the 10" price). With the concern we all have over controlling the purity of our water, why do we, and all the manufacturers of RO/DI units, essentially make things twice as hard as they have to be?
Same with DI cartridges, since again, contact time seems to be the name of the game.
Same with DI cartridges, since again, contact time seems to be the name of the game.