Non potable water can chemicals such as Chlorides, Sulfates and Alkalies which can chemically attack the concrete.
Non-Potable water/Reclaimed water.
to obtain potable water from aquifers
supply potable water
Flush the lines from a clean potable water supply
Excess water (over hydration) causes weak concrete. The water in concrete is there to start a chemical process which results in the hardening process. The excess water is not used in the chemical process and results in a weakened concrete.
Non potable water can chemicals such as Chlorides, Sulfates and Alkalies which can chemically attack the concrete.
Water quality before recycling may vary. After it is recycled for drinking then it is drinking water, potable, and fit to drink.
Water quality before recycling may vary. After it is recycled for drinking then it is drinking water, potable, and fit to drink.
The water fountain had potable water
Hard water is potable (drinkable).
Tap water is potable, or drinking, water. When it is introduced into a boiler or other non-drinking resources, it becomes NON potable
Your answer depends on who's comparing and where the comparison takes place. Further, the quality of the diamonds and the quality of the water will be part of your argument.For example:Gem-quality diamonds are more valuable than easily available, potable water.Industrial diamonds are less valuable than easily available, potable water.You can develop logic around hard-to-find water, polluted water and so forth and compare these to gem-quality and industrial diamonds.There is no standard.
Potable is from the Latin word "potare" which means "to drink." The term potable water refers to water that is safe to drink.
No. Once you pump anything but potable water with that pump, it's not good for pumping potable water.
the strength of concrete is effected by water /cement ratio as the water/cement ratio increases the strength of the concrete decreases
'Potable' is usually used as such, referring mainly to water.
Not exactly. Water that comes into your house is potable[ safe to drink] but you pay for it.