Day: May 8, 2024

Dr. Sarah Frahm – Veneers vs. Braces: What’s Best for Your Smile?

If you’re asking: what’s best for my smile braces or veneers? Keep reading to learn about the latest dental solutions to enhance your smile.

When you feel insecure about your teeth, you smile less. And, who wants that? Your smile communicates beyond words. It’s only natural to want to have a healthy, attractive smile.

These days, there are many ways to enhance your smile. Orthodontics, like invisible or traditional braces, refine your bite and align teeth. If you have teeth that are chipped, cracked, or even a little broken porcelain veneers can make a big difference.

What Do Veneers Treat?

Veneers restore your teeth and enhance their appearance. Porcelain veneers are the gold standard of veneers. his is because they are durable and closely resemble natural tooth enamel. A veneer fits over the front of your tooth. Veneers refine the shape and color of your teeth. Dr. Frahm works exclusively with U.S. dental laboratories to create custom veneers just for you. She often recommends veneers for people who would like to refine:

  • Teeth with chips, cracks, and minor breaks
  • To close gaps between teeth
  • Tooth shape, size, and length
  • Color of teeth that cannot be altered with whitening

Veneers can be placed in just two visits. Our process for veneer placement is designed to include you every step of the way. We value your input. From smile imaging, to a try on smile, to the placement of your final smile, what you think matters.

What Do Braces Treat?

Braces are a popular treatment for misaligned teeth, overbites, underbites, and cross-bites. They can also be used to close gaps between the teeth and resolve overcrowding. While braces require months of your time, they provide a long-term correction. With modern orthodontic options, there are several types of braces for people of all ages. Many adults opt for Invisalign.

Invisalign offers a series of clear, plastic aligners. Every few weeks you come in for a visit and receive a new plastic aligner. The aligners are nearly invisible. You can discretely remove them just before your meals. And, you put them back in after.

Orthodontics may be best if you are satisfied with the:

  • Shape and size of your teeth
  • Color of your teeth
  • Structure of your teeth – you do not have chips, cracks, or minor breaks in your teeth

Pros and Cons of Veneers

As with any type of cosmetic treatment, there are pros and cons to getting veneers.

Pros of Veneers

  • The cover gaps, misshapen teeth, a chipped tooth, and tooth stains
  • Choice of materials
  • Natural-looking, beautiful proportioned smile
  • Stain resistant
  • Rapid and sometimes dramatic results

Cons of Veneers

  • They are permanent
  • Conservative removal of enamel
  • Requires investment and maintenance

Pros and Cons of Braces

Braces pose their own advantages and disadvantages, whether they’re placed for cosmetic or dental health reasons:

Pros of Braces

  • Solves structural problems
  • Helps prevent oral issues through proper alignment of teeth
  • Give you options for care such as Invisalign, ceramic braces to match the color of your teeth, or traditional metal brackets and wires
  • Slow corrective change designed to last

Cons of Braces

  • Cannot change size or shape of teeth
  • Can take more than a year
  • Treatment can be uncomfortable

Braces or Veneers: Which Orthodontic Treatment is Best for Your Teeth?

There are many paths to a healthier, more attractive smile. Braces and invisible orthodontics are excellent options for fixing your bite, straightening crooked teeth, and achieving proper alignment. Veneers can enhance your appearance by refining your entire smile. With veneers you can improve the shape and color of your teeth.

Dr. Frahm is an expert at helping people just like you. She has the knowledge and expertise to design dental treatment that improves your health and enhances your appearance. If you’re curious about your options for a better smile, please schedule a consultative visit. You may find that a single treatment, a combination of care options, or a phased approach will help you reach your goals. Click the link below to learn more. 

Dr. Sarah Frahm | What's Best for Your Smile?

Mastering Maintenance: Vital Tips For EcoWater Treatment Systems

Welcome to an insightful guide for optimizing your EcoWater treatment system. Maintaining your system is not only about ensuring clean and soft water but also about understanding the essential care needed to keep it running smoothly. Let’s embark on this journey to elevate your understanding of EcoWater system maintenance.

How the Ecowater System’s Water Softener Works

The EcoWater treatment system’s water softener uses a resin charged with negative ions. The positive ions of the sodium solution activate the resin. When the resin is activated, it softens hard water by filtering out high minerals and other impurities. The resin must “regenerate” or be cleaned and recharged with sodium solution. The EcoWater treatment system performs proportional regeneration at least once or twice a week in the early morning hours, depending on the user’s water usage pattern.

Salt Maintenance for Your EcoWater System

Ensuring the proper salt level in your EcoWater system is crucial for its performance. The automated regeneration cycle handles most maintenance tasks, leaving users primarily responsible for maintaining the salt level in the tank. Maintaining the salt level at around half full is advised, ensuring it stays approximately three inches above the water level or at Level 5. Overfilling the salt tank should be avoided to prevent complications such as salt bridging and salt mushing.

What is the Best Salt for EcoWater Systems?

When choosing salt for your EcoWater water softener, consider pellet or nugget-shaped varieties, which come in several types:

  • Evaporated Pellets: Considered the purest option, evaporated pellets are less prone to causing salt bridging or mushing. However, they tend to be the most expensive.
  • Solar Pellets: These pellets dissolve more efficiently than rock salt pellets but may not be as effective in areas with very high water hardness.
  • Rock Salt Pellets: Among the most economical options, rock salt pellets can pose maintenance challenges due to their higher calcium sulfate content.
  • Potassium Chloride Pellets: Potassium chloride pellets can substitute for salt for individuals monitoring sodium intake. However, they may not always be readily available through EcoWater distributors and tend to be the priciest option. Increasing the dosage of water softeners by 10% is recommended to ensure proper resin regeneration.

Salt Bridges

Salt bridges are the hard crusts that form in the salt tank, away from the water. These crusts cannot recharge the resin. These crystalline formations occur due to factors like high humidity, sudden temperature shifts, or using an incompatible salt type. 

To dissolve the salt bridges back into the water, carefully insert a long object, such as a broom handle, into the salt tank and break apart the crusts. Mix the salt back into the water.

Salt Mushing

When salt clumps on the bottom of the salt tank, it can turn into a thick layer that does not regenerate the resin effectively and causes blockage. Salt mushing is often caused by using low-quality water softener salt, or the water hardness is too high for the type of salt used.

To remedy this, drain the salt tank of water. Remove the salt mush and replace it with fast-dissolving high-quality salt pellets.

There is a temporary solution if high-quality, fast-dissolving salt is not immediately available. Take out the salt mush, dissolve it in hot water, and return it to the tank. Do this until you can buy better-quality and higher-softening salt.

Maintaining the Venturi Valve

The Venturi and nozzle system suctions the salt water from the salt tank into the resin tank for regeneration. The Venturi valve is prone to sediments, impurities, and salt-mushing blockages. It will need to be cleaned every six months. Here is a guide on how to clean your Venturi valve.

I Am Still Getting Hard or Impure Water. What Should I Do?

There are two possibilities if you are still getting hard water or water with impurities:

  1. You are getting said water during the EcoWater System’s regeneration time.
  2. The water system requires deep cleaning. 

Faulty Regeneration Time

Regeneration time signifies a phase when the water circumvents the system. This process occurs during the early morning hours. It lasts about an hour. However, if the regeneration schedule is faulty, it can result in receiving untreated water during that hour. It can risk water heaters to have mineral buildup inside them.

To rectify this issue:

  1. Ensure the water system’s clock maintains accuracy.
  2. Verify if the regeneration schedule aligns correctly (consult the manual or contact an EcoWater dealer for guidance).
  3. If the time and schedule seem correct, yet intermittent untreated water persists, seek assistance from your EcoWater dealer to resolve the issue promptly.

Deep Cleaning the EcoWater Tank

The softener system maintenance consists of deep cleaning every 5-10 years. The older it gets, the shorter the years before it must be deep-cleaned again.

  1. Drain the salt tank into a sewage drain and avoid throwing the salt water on the soil.
  2. Remove the grid plate and wash the interior of the tank.
  3. Soak the inside with bleach for 15 minutes before rinsing it.
  4. Refill the tank with water and salt.

Questions? We’re Here to Help

Navigating the maintenance and care of your EcoWater treatment system is vital to ensuring its lasting efficiency and performance. Whether it’s understanding salt maintenance, troubleshooting regeneration issues, or planning system deep cleaning, our team, as an EcoWater Systems distributor, is here to assist you every step of the way. Learn more with the link below.

H2O Solutions | Mastering Maintenance