- Enter the source water hardness in grains per gallon (gpg). If your lab result is in mg/L as CaCO₃, divide by 17.1 to convert to gpg.
- Enter the daily volume treated in gallons per day — your facility's actual daily water use, not peak instantaneous flow.
- Enter the softener's resin capacity in grains — from the tank's spec plate or vendor datasheet (commonly 20,000–60,000 grains for dialysis-scale softeners).
- Adjust the reserve margin if your facility regenerates before full exhaustion (default 20%).
All computation runs in your browser; no values are stored or transmitted.
When to Use
Use this whenever you are sizing a new softener, evaluating whether an existing softener is adequate for your facility's actual water use, or investigating a hard-water event (RO scaling, positive hardness at the softener outlet) to check whether undersizing was a contributing factor.
Appropriate use
Pretreatment sizing/expansion planning, vendor-proposal review, and root-cause review after a hardness breakthrough or RO scaling event.
When NOT to rely on it
This estimates regeneration frequency from rated resin capacity only — actual capacity degrades with resin age, fouling, and improper brine dosing. Always verify post-softener hardness directly (should be effectively zero) rather than assuming the softener is adequate from this calculation alone.
Pearls & Pitfalls
Undersizing is a silent failure mode
Hardness breakthrough doesn't change how the water looks, smells, or tastes. The only way to catch it is testing softener-outlet hardness directly and tracking regeneration frequency against what the resin capacity should provide — which is exactly what this calculator checks.
Less than one day between regenerations means duplex, not more frequent single-tank cycles
A single softener tank is offline during regeneration (backwash, brine draw, rinse) — typically 30–90 minutes. If the tank would otherwise need to regenerate more than once per day, a single-tank configuration either interrupts soft-water supply or is quietly bypassed during regeneration. A duplex/dual-alternating configuration (one tank regenerates while the other stays in service) is the standard fix, mirroring the same worker/polisher logic used for carbon tanks.
Pitfalls
(1) Using an old or assumed hardness value instead of a current lab or field test — source hardness can change seasonally or with a new well. (2) Ignoring resin capacity degradation over years of service — a tank rated for 30,000 grains when new may deliver meaningfully less after years of use. (3) Sizing to average daily volume instead of accounting for peak-demand days (e.g., all stations run, or an added shift).
Softener Sizing Calculator
Enter source hardness, daily volume treated, and resin capacity. Days between regenerations and a duplex-configuration flag appear below.
⚕ Estimates regeneration frequency from rated resin capacity only — verify post-softener hardness directly. See the Water Treatment Systems reference §4.4. For biomedical engineers and dialysis technicians; not a substitute for a validated facility engineering assessment.
Next Steps
Use the days-between-regenerations result to decide whether a single softener tank is adequate or whether a duplex configuration is warranted.
- If regeneration frequency is impractical (less than about once per day), plan for a duplex/dual-alternating softener rather than more frequent single-tank cycles.
- Verify post-softener hardness directly (target: effectively zero) rather than relying on this calculation alone — resin capacity degrades with age.
- If capacity is being expanded (more stations, added shift), re-run this calculator with the new daily volume — softener sizing must scale alongside RO and carbon capacity.
- See the full Hemodialysis Water Treatment Systems guide for source-water-specific pretreatment design.
Evidence & References
Formula
| Quantity | Formula |
|---|---|
| Daily grain load | source hardness (grains/gallon) × daily volume treated (gallons/day) |
| Usable resin capacity | rated resin capacity (grains) × (1 − reserve margin/100) |
| Days between regenerations | usable resin capacity (grains) ÷ daily grain load (grains/day) |
The duplex-configuration threshold (regeneration needed more than about once per day) reflects standard water-treatment engineering practice for continuously-operating facilities; always verify against your softener manufacturer's regeneration-cycle duration and your facility's validated design basis.
References
- Kasparek T, Rodriguez OE. What Medical Directors Need to Know about Dialysis Facility Water Management. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2015;10(6):1061-1071.
- Suravaram S, Gopikonda SS, Siddiqui IA, et al. Enhancing infection control in dialysis at a resource limited public healthcare institute: microbiological quality assessment of dialysis water and dialysate (ANSI/AAMI RD47:2020, ISO 23500-4:2019). Indian J Med Microbiol. 2024;52:100734.
