Nope, boiled water is basically what it is, its boiled then the steam is caught on cold surface and cools and runs back into container and you have your deionised water
That is distilled, not de-ionised.helmutcheese said:Nope, boiled water is basically what it is, its boiled then the steam is caught on cold surface and condenses and runs back into container and you have your Deionised Water
Deionised water shouldn't be used because it will try to rob ions from any source it can, waterblock,radiator.
http://www.overclockers.com/articles993/ said:Another potential concern is that DI water is more corrosive to metal parts than plain old ionized water. It takes a lot of effort and energy to remove the majority of ions from water. Water desires these ions back and will aggressively take them from any available source. Some people will tell you to never use DI water in a PC water-cooling system. Like most things in life, moderation is the key! If you use DI water to occasionally fill your cooling system, the water will immediately strip ions away from the surfaces of all wetted metals. But, no measurable damage will occur. You would have to continuously fill and drain your system 24/7 for weeks before you might see your waterblock or radiator starting to dissolve. Truly pure, DI water doesn't stay de-ionized very long when exposed to air and poured thru various containers
That is distilled, not de-ionised.
http://www.overclockers.com/articles993/
Well worth reading through.
Been using di-ionised water for years here. I've yet to encounter any problems. If di-ionised was so bad and corroded any metal it came into contact with then I'm pretty sure it wouldn't be recommended for kettles and car batteries etc.