mark_wpduet
Well-known member
This is more of a chemistry question. I tried googling and I think I know the answer but I'm really not sure. I just learned this when I discovered something with my countertop ice maker... which I've used a lot for a few months and taken immaculate care of (as I try to do everything I have)...
I use RO (reverse osmosis water) which reads 0 to at most 1 ppm... I fill 3 glass gallon jugs with RO water that stays in the fridge and I use it mostly when I make coffee in my Keurig or make ice with the ice maker... The entire ice maker stays spotless because after I'm done with it... I use my clip fan to dry the inside so nothing will grow in there..
Today I noticed the silver prongs/ rods whatever they are are almost discolored... and it's not minerals.
From searching I found out that RO water is acidic..and that it could possibly be eating away at that coating because it and metal don't mix
Now when I make coffee or drink the water, I add mineral drops to it... after the coffee is made.. not before.
So all of this time I thought I was saving my coffee and ice maker but in fact I might be destroying it by using RO water??
which leads me to my main question: If I put mineral drops in the water in my keurig and ice maker will this make the water less acidic preventing any damange?
I wish I had known this...
I also found you can buy alkaline drops as well... But I thought minerals made the water alkaline... why would you need both?
Oh well. Here's a pic of it.. It still works great but if you look closely at the prongs zoomed in you can see it

I use RO (reverse osmosis water) which reads 0 to at most 1 ppm... I fill 3 glass gallon jugs with RO water that stays in the fridge and I use it mostly when I make coffee in my Keurig or make ice with the ice maker... The entire ice maker stays spotless because after I'm done with it... I use my clip fan to dry the inside so nothing will grow in there..
Today I noticed the silver prongs/ rods whatever they are are almost discolored... and it's not minerals.
From searching I found out that RO water is acidic..and that it could possibly be eating away at that coating because it and metal don't mix
Now when I make coffee or drink the water, I add mineral drops to it... after the coffee is made.. not before.
So all of this time I thought I was saving my coffee and ice maker but in fact I might be destroying it by using RO water??
which leads me to my main question: If I put mineral drops in the water in my keurig and ice maker will this make the water less acidic preventing any damange?
I wish I had known this...
I also found you can buy alkaline drops as well... But I thought minerals made the water alkaline... why would you need both?
Oh well. Here's a pic of it.. It still works great but if you look closely at the prongs zoomed in you can see it
