Sale!
,

Culligan WH-HD200-C Whole House Water Filter System 1 Inlet/Outlet Improve Tap Water Taste, Remove Sediment, Protect Appliances

(10 customer reviews)

Original price was: $109.99.Current price is: $80.00.

Availability: 15 in stock

SKU: B01JIRLRXY Categories: ,

The WH-HD200-C Heavy Duty clear whole house system with clear sump allows you to see your filter in action. Included with the unit is a mounting bracket, housing wrench, filter life indicator, built in shut-off, bypass, and pressure relief valve.


From the manufacturer

Culligan WH-HD200-C Whole House Heavy Duty 1″ Inlet/Outlet Filtration System

Removes Dirt, Sand, and Silt from Your Water Supply

The Culligan Whole-House Sediment Water Filter Housing makes sure your family has a clean, fresh water supply throughout the house. This filtration system works to reduce dirt, sand, and silt buildup in plumbing lines. Your kitchen, laundry room, bathroom, and outdoor water comes out clean and fresh to help keep your family healthy.

Prolongs the Lives of Your Water-Using Appliances

Humans aren’t the only ones who benefit from clean water-machines also run more smoothly, and longer, when the water they take in is fresh and dirt free. Because the Sediment Water Filter Housing limits the amount of dirt and grime introduced into your appliances, your home’s water-using devices are likely to last longer and perform at their best.

Features

  • 1″ inlet/outlet for increased water flow
  • Packaging includes: housing wrench, mounting bracket, filter life monitory and filter battery monitor
  • Temperature Range: 40°F – 100°F
  • Pressure Range: 125 psi

Weight 4.082328 kg
Dimensions 8.26 × 7.48 × 16.33 cm
ASIN

B01JIRLRXY

Model Number

WH-HD200-C

UPC

033663007314

Brand

Culligan

Built-In Media

WR-HD housing wrench, mounting bracket, filter life monitor and battery

Model Name

Whole House Sediment Water Filter

Flow Rate

1E+1 Gallons Per Minute

Installation Method

In Line

Purification Method

Sedimentation

Power Source

Battery Powered

Additional Features

Heavy Duty, WQA certified, Rust Resistant

Container Type

Cartridge,Cartridges

Capacity

16000 Gallons

Item Weight

9 Pounds

Item Dimensions L x W x H

8.26"L x 7.48"W x 16.33"H

Material Type

Stainless Steel

Manufacturer

CULLIGAN

10 reviews for Culligan WH-HD200-C Whole House Water Filter System 1 Inlet/Outlet Improve Tap Water Taste, Remove Sediment, Protect Appliances

  1. Vincent Price – NOT


    I purchased and installed this filter specifically for my fridge: Because my fridge has a very proprietary GE filter that is supposed to last 6 months at a time but keeps getting clogged with sediment after only 3 weeks of use (and I can’t afford replacing filters at $55 a piece every 3 weeks), I installed this Culligan filter to help pre-filter the water before it gets to my fridge’s more expensive filter. It did do the trick and didn’t seem to drop the water pressure at all. Since it’s only supplying water to my fridge, I expect the Culligan filter inserts to last much, much longer than the six months it’s rated for when used for a whole house.This was a pain to install because of the way it was designed, but it was well worth it at the price.It would have been a bit easier to install if the manufacturer had used something smaller than 1-inch threaded openings for the inlet and outlet — it took me a couple of hours at my local big orange DIY store to find the right combination of fittings that would go from my 3/4 or 1/2 inch copper pipes in my house to the inlet and then from the outlet to the right fittings to fit my fridge water/icemaker water supply hose. I did find the right parts in the end as can be seen in the photo(s).Another problem with the 1-inch threaded fitting is that because it’s such a large fitting, the threads are comparably large and coarse, so it takes a lot of teflon tape and a large amount of force to make the fittings between components water-tight. After installation, I did have an extremely slow leak (a drop every half hour) at one of the threaded points; fortunately for me, a bit more elbow grease to further tighten up the fittings stopped the leak. I’ll have to keep an eye on my connections over the next few days after installation to ensure a zero leak installation, and I recommend others do the same with these types of fittings. I was hesitant to use too much force to tighten the fittings because even though Culligan claims the threaded joints are enforced with metal, the connections are still plastic and can break if too much force is used.For those without the skills, I’d recommend hiring a plumber to install the filter.The clear filter cartridge housing was also really difficult to unscrew out-of-the-box and required using the included tool to open. (You can see the black plastic tool hanging next to my filter in the photos.) It’s not stated in the installation instructions, but for putting the housing back on, it’s recommended in the filter cartridge instructions to only hand tighten. I only hand tightened as advised in the cartridge’s instructions, and there was no leak even after 24 hours of use/water running through the filter/housing. Jut make sure to follow the instructions about the O-ring and silicone grease.The installation instructions did mention using silicone grease on the included O-ring when installing the filter housing, so I purchased some from my local big orange home DIY store. Again, no leak at the O-ring for me. The silicone grease I used was for use on potable water connections, and it took only a tiny bit to completely cover the O-ring with my fingers.Replacement O-rings themselves are available here on Amazon, and I purchased some extras because one of the other reviewers warned that his/her O-ring had gotten damaged during installation. Prime shipping got the extra O-rings to me in just a day or two, but I ended up not using them for my installation and will save them next to the filter for future use.The filter’s Filter-Off-Bypass valve does work, but it’s a pain in the behind to turn by hand without a tool. The valve takes a bit of strength to turn even with the included tool. I suspect that the tool itself will break eventually because it seems to be a bit flimsy for what it was designed to do: for example, instead of being made out of a solid piece of plastic, it’s a semi-hollow frame, and I was really afraid it would snap off at the thinnest point every time I used it to turn the filter’s valve from setting to setting. I did check that one of my local big box stores do carry universal filter housing tools of a similar design, so I think I should at least be able to open up the filter housing to replace the filter if the original tool breaks in half — not sure yet where I’ll be able to find a similar tool to change the settings on the valve, however, as the valve handle is a very unique shape.I do think that this filter along with similar looking filters from some of the other big-brands are all made by some third company that these more well-known companies purchase from and slaps their brands on. E.g., GE and Dupont both make whole-house filters at around the same price point as this Culligan filter but with their own brands — the big difference between the others and this Culligan is that this one has the Filter-Off-Bypass valve, although Culligan also has a version without the valve like the other brands. One big plus of all this is that the filter cartridges seem to all be of the same sizes, so I won’t have to worry as much about finding replacement cartridges in the distant future (decades from now) if Culligan decides to stop selling these filters.Overall, I do recommend this filter. I ended up spending almost $50 in parts and supplies to make a proper all-copper-and-brass, soldered connection to my water supply line, but the filter and filter cartridge themselves together cost less than $100. At that price, it was well worth it to get cleaner water — and to save me lots more in the cost of replacing more expensive filters for my fridge.

  2. Josh F


    It was easy to install, and it is quick and simple to replace the filter every few months. It is quality material and easily keeps up with the water demands of our home. After a few months, the filter is nice and dirty, which gives me peace of mind seeing that the dirt is being removed from our water.

  3. P. Nguyen


    We have 2, installed pre and post water softener. Pre is using a setiment/carbon filter and post is setiment. Upon first opening, I was impressed by its solid construction. The plastic is not flimsy, the mounting bracket is very sturdy. Upon installation, for adaptors we used Sharkbite 1 inch male to 1 inch brass crimp for PEX-B pipe. When tightening with seal tape, the female threaded plastic is surrounded by metal and is sturdy so I was not concerned about cracking due to over tightening. But still want to take caution to not over tight. You will feel it when it won’t go in further. We added a little bit of silicon faucet grease to the o-ring, works nicely. Everything sealed perfectly first time. Highly recommended.

  4. Old Alice


    Great filter, NIGHTMARE installation. Perhaps I can save Amazon buyers a bit of time with what not to do if you buy one.First, our ‘main’ water line travels underground to an exterior wall, and continues into the house under the slab. There are no exposed pipes to mount this on, so we called a licensed plumber to create the piping loops necessary to use the filter. Piping was smooth, finally the filter was mounted.Then the problems began. Our O-ring came broken, OR, the plumber broke it during install. We don’t know, all we know is he told us the O-ring was broken, and that led to a mad scramble calling Amazon about immediate O-ring replacement (which is not carried by PRIME – WHY NOT?) to be shipped out to us asap, as water poured all over our garage. The plumber told us to get the O-ring and call him to come back to finish installing the filter. Meanwhile he put it on “Bypass”, but it continued to leak. Rather than call him again (for a few hundred more dollars), we decided we could figure it out how to work the filter part ourselves.Solution: My LOTS of damage and money saving suggestion: buy an O-ring with the order for backup, AND Silicone Grease to plaster the O-ring down BEFORE installation. If all goes well with the installation, you have a backup O-ring (although you will still need the grease to plaster down the existing O-ring). I wish I knew about this before the purchase because we spent way more than this in water damage and water cost from the flooding in the garage for 10 hours overnight. You don’t actually need a spare O-ring if you have and use the silicone grease on the included one before trying to screw the filter into the housing. Just slather the silicone grease all over the O-ring, filling in the groove. Works like a charm to stop leaks once screwed in tight.The red air-release button on top. Plumber told us that we should hold that down while turning the knob, because even he had trouble turning the top. We did just this after sealing the o-ring down, and water poured out under and around the blue cap thereafter. We thought the unit came defective, but after hours of drenching spraying mess while experimenting, we found the problem. This included poking a long strip of plastic up through the filter housing, while using a waterproof flashlight and hanging upside down to see into the main unit housing piping to ascertain the problem while water dripped into my eyes. Not fun.The PROBLEM is, if you push the red button down WHILE turning the blue handle you can trap the bottom of the air release, and it will hold that air release open in the new position (Filter, Off, or Bypass).Solution: DO NOT hold the red button down while turning. DO NOT hold the red button down at all. Once the filter is screwed into place TIGHTLY (with your O-ring plastered down with silicone grease), turn water on and TAP the red button until water BEGINS to flow. More than that and you risk getting it stuck like we did. You do not want to get it stuck.Some other facts that are not clear in the directions:- the Filter housing needs to be tight, or it leaks. Must reapply the silicone grease every single time you take it off, or it leaks.- the blue turn valve is HARD to turn. This has been noted in other reviews, but you don’t know HOW hard it is initially, so you think that maybe that red air valve is a turn release. It’s not. It’s just HARD to turn. After all our experimenting with trying to stop water from shooting 30′ across our garage, we loosened it simply by turning it so many times. NOW it works perfectly, and turns much more easily.All that said, we are glad we bought it, just wish it wasn’t the ordeal it didn’t have to be. If Culligan simply noted these 2 things on the box or directions, we could have saved a LOT of misery.NOTE: the red button is NOT a release for the blue valve, do NOT hold it down! Manual only mentions that it’s an air valve, not that holding it down can trap it in the water spraying open position.NOTE: you NEED to buy silicone grease for the O-ring with/before the purchase, or they begin to include some in the box (because normal people do not have silicone grease laying around their house). Without the grease, it’s probably going to leak, or you have to screw that filter so tightly into the housing that you will have real trouble getting it off again to change the filter. Why not tell people what they need beforehand?If you note these 2 things, installation could go really smoothly. NOW it works great, but wow… what an unnecessary ordeal!Hope you find this helpful, wish someone told me all this before I tried to install it, because the solutions are so simple!!**editing to add a photo showing how the plumber laid out the piping in the garage, and to show what the filter looks like after a month in use. Seeing how dirty the filter is, I’m even more glad I bought this!

  5. JDoebel


    Ordered two of these filters to help with my unknown city water. The two are ran in series. I run a 25 micro in the first and then a charcoal filter in the second. I was concerned about the water pressure dropping with two filters but haven’t had any issues. There is a bypass valve in these so if you do, you can partially turn them on the bypass and get your pressure back. These look good and function well. Surprised by how bad city water can be.. Just a heads up, the valve is extremely hard to turn! You will need the tool they give you to switch from filter to off when changing.

  6. Adrian Medellin Ruiz

    Excelente
    Lleva años de uso y tiene muy buena calidad

  7. Edgar Torres Ortiz

    EXCELENTE
    EXCELENTE PRODUCYO

  8. ATC123

    Make Sure it is well Anchored
    I would have given this 5 stars except for the fact that I find it hard to unscrew when it comes time to replace the filter. The clear housing and pressure release work perfectly but even when I do not tighten it much, it seems at after a couple months it is hard to loosen. I had anchored it pretty securely (4 lag bolts into the stone wall) and I am glad I did. The overall design is good and I am very pleased with its performance and being able to see the condition of the filter is a real plus.

  9. Jucamedi

    Beun filtro, elegir bien cartucho
    Cumple con la función, pero en donde vivo el agua llega muy sucia y un filtro de 25 micrones me duro 2 semanas, es importante revisar bien qué tipo de cartucho se va a usar, pero el sistema me ha gustado mucho hasta ahora.

  10. ChristianT

    Quality product
    Bought the Culligan as a replacement to a same sized GE unit which cracked after more than 10 years of use. It is very well made and comes with a decent mounting bracket which is a must because these types of filters are very difficult to unscrew. The bypass valve is very stiff and is probably meant to be like that because the wrench to undo the filter also has a slot to fit over the bypass valve handle. One note, on the GE filter I had to change the O-ring with every filter change because it would stretch when unscrewing the filter…not sure how it will be with the Culligan; the O-ring is much thicker…and is expensive! Culligan filters, at least on Amazon, are more expensive than other filters. Finally, someone mentioned that the female threads are plastic and prone to stripping: like all such products you have to screw it in delicately by hand as far as possible BEFORE using any mechanical tightening aid. Also remember to use a fair amount of teflon tape.

Add a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *