- HEP
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Clean Water
Clean Water | Water Purification | Plumbing | Ocoee
Imagine turning on your tap in Ocoee and tasting nothing but crisp, refreshing purity—no chlorine bite, no metallic after-taste, just clean water your family can trust. HEP’s licensed plumbers make that everyday luxury possible by engineering whole-home water purification solutions that strip away sediment, chemicals, and microbes before they ever reach your glass. From quick under-sink filters to advanced reverse-osmosis systems, we match cutting-edge technology with hometown service, so your drinking water is as welcoming as the city you love.
Every installation begins with a complimentary water analysis, followed by transparent recommendations and flat-rate pricing. Our team handles permits, precision installs, and ongoing maintenance, letting you enjoy lower appliance repair bills, brighter laundry, and healthier skin—all backed by HEP’s satisfaction guarantee. Ready to elevate your tap? Call or click today and experience the peace of mind that flows from truly clean water.
FAQs
Why should Ocoee homeowners consider additional water purification if the city already treats the water?
Ocoee’s municipal water meets federal safety standards, but it can still pick up chlorine by-products, dissolved minerals, trace metals and organic contaminants as it travels through miles of piping. A point-of-entry or point-of-use purification system gives you a last line of defense right before the water reaches your tap, ensuring better taste, fewer odors, reduced hardness scale on fixtures and extra protection for children, pets and anyone with sensitive skin or allergies.
What contaminants are most commonly found in West Orange County water and how are they removed?
Lab tests of local tap water often detect chlorine/chloramine (added for disinfection), hardness minerals (calcium and magnesium), hydrogen sulfide that causes a rotten-egg smell, trace levels of lead from older service lines, and low concentrations of industrial or agricultural chemicals. Activated carbon filters remove chlorine, bad taste and many organics; water softeners or salt-free conditioners address hardness; reverse-osmosis (RO) membranes strip away heavy metals, fluoride and nitrates; and UV light neutralizes bacteria or viruses that may enter the line during main breaks or hurricanes.
Which types of water purification systems do you install and how do they differ?
We design and install three primary categories: (1) Whole-house systems such as carbon filtration plus softeners/conditioners that treat every fixture, (2) High-purity point-of-use systems like under-sink RO units for cooking and drinking water, and (3) Specialty add-ons such as UV sterilizers or iron/sulfur filters for well users on the city’s outskirts. Whole-house units improve bathing, laundry and appliance longevity, whereas RO gives bottled-water quality at a single faucet. We can combine technologies to tailor a multi-stage solution.
How do I know which purification system is right for my home or business?
We begin with a free on-site consultation that includes a water test measuring hardness, TDS, chlorine, pH, iron, sulfur and lead. We also review plumbing layout, household size, flow demand and budget. Using this data, our licensed plumber recommends one or more options, explains the pros/cons and provides a written quote. Because every property’s water chemistry and usage pattern is different, this consult ensures you neither overspend on features you don’t need nor overlook critical treatment stages.
What is involved in the installation process and how long does it take?
Most residential installs are completed in a half-day. Whole-house units tie into the main water line—usually in the garage or an exterior closet—so we shut off the water for 1–2 hours while we cut in a bypass loop, mount the tanks and connect drain and power lines. Under-sink RO systems require drilling a dedicated faucet hole (if one isn’t already available) and tapping the cold-water feed. All work is performed by state-licensed plumbers, and we pull any necessary city permits. When finished, we flush and pressure-test the system, show you how to use the bypass valve, and leave your space clean.
How much maintenance do water purification systems need and what does it cost?
Maintenance is minimal: carbon pre-filters are replaced every 6–12 months (about $40–$80), RO membranes every 2–3 years ($90–$120), and softener salt refills run roughly $6–$10 per month depending on usage. UV lamps are swapped yearly. We offer affordable service plans that include annual testing, filter changes and system sanitization. With proper upkeep, systems last 10–15 years, protect appliances from scale build-up and can lower spending on bottled water and cleaning products—often paying for themselves within three to five years.