Core Mission

Helping farmers fix hard water problems so their soil absorbs better, their equipment lasts longer, and their crops grow stronger.

Hear From Actual Clients

“I installed the CP5 for my farming operation in West Texas, I once was on 12 acres with three wells and the CP5 performed wonders on the gyp water in West Texas.

I recently was forced to move back to the city and started a small farming operation that relied on collecting rain and storing it in a massive tank.  At first this operation seemed like it was unsustainable. I was using too much water from the tank during large gaps in rainfall. Then after collected rain water ran dry, the city water supplementation was devastating to my vegetables.

I added the CP5 to my pump discharge trunk line that feeds my city farming operation from the rain tank, the results were immediate. I am now using 80 percentage less water through my drip system and I am sustainable. I also fill my backpack sprayer anytime I'm going to foliar feed or supplement anything with the homologous water the CP5 generates. I am truly blessed.”

-Abilene, TX

Email about a feedlot well pump before and after CP5 installed

“After digging thru all the records I could find here, this is what I came up with as to what we've done with that pump and motor as far back as the computer keeps records:

7/11/98 New Pump End

4/7/04 New 15HP Motor

6/5/04 New Pump End

6/21/06 New 15HP Motor  As we all recall, at the time this pump was pulled, everything from static water level, down to the pump, was completely covered in roughly 4" of iron bacteria, and that was after only setting for 2 years.

7/30/06 Pulled pump to add ground wire to accommodate adding the VFD to the system. Even after only a month of being reset from the last motor change, iron bacteria had covered everything once again.

The pictured pump and motor, were pulled out of the well on 6/24/2020, roughly 14 years after it had last been out. It wasn't washed off, or cleaned in anyway (with the exception of the screen on the pump end itself, as I was going to try to reuse the pump but decided against it)”

-Minneapolis, KS

Two large, rusty hydraulic cylinders lying on dry ground with rocks and sparse vegetation.