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You don't want a Power Survivor 80 or any model from PUR or their
predecessor Recovery Engineering - it's worth nothing. Suggest they remove it and lower the price. Or pay you to remove it and they can sell it on eBay for parts. Second - chlorine has killed the membrane - trust me - or call PUR. On Fri, 20 Feb 2004 01:30:09 GMT, "Skip Gundlach" wrote: I'm about to buy a boat with a Power Survivor 80 watermaker, installed in 2002. The owner died about 9 or so months ago, and there's some question as to whether he ever used it. I think I recall hearing that Chlorine was damaging to membranes. There are two, about 2' long, on this model. The broker has been flushing this system (not ever making water in the 8+ months it's been in a canal berth in Ft. Lauderdale) with city water every few weeks, and assures me that this is proper for this model, claiming that flushing as he does is adequate and frequent enough. Looking at the output (overboard), it starts cloudy and goes clear. So, is the first assertion (Chlorine is trouble) correct, and if not, does the second assertion (this model doesn't require pickling), combined with approximately 3-4 weeks between flushes, hold water, pardon the expression? If there's trouble brewing, I'd greatly appreciate a link to support it, as it's one of the items on the survey, and we're supposed to counter in a few days... Thanks, ever so much... L8R Skip and Lydia, anticipating "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |