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The Perfect Whole House Water Filter
Whole house water filters are an excellent solution to poor water quality no matter where you live. These devices are installed at your water main before any water enters hour home, and they can remove most contaminants you're concerned about before any water reaches your family. Instead of worrying, you'll have clean, pure water with great taste from every tap in your home.

You might be surprised at the range of benefits your whole house water filter can provide you. For instance, they remove most of the chlorine from your water, which prevents chlorine from vaporizing in the shower to form hazardous chlorine gas. They can also help soften your water or at least remove much of the mineral problem in it before it gets to your hot water heater and to your family. Purer, softer water works better with soaps and cleansers, so you'll be able to use less and save money, and fewer deposits will accumulate in your shower, saving you time cleaning.

With a whole house water filter, you won't have to have a separate water filter for your drinking water supply, either; a good filter will provide you with bottled-water quality water right out of your tap.

A whole house water filter is a home improvement project, and should be approached as such. While it is a significant expense, it also adds to your home's value. These filters will take up about half the space of a standard water heater, and you'll need to hire a professional plumber to install them. Filters need to be changed out once or twice a year, depending on the type of filters you have and how contaminated your water is. Costs of your whole house water filter will be offset by savings on bottled water purchasing and by the decrease in the amount of soaps you'll need to use; if you have a problem with indoor air quality, a whole house water filter can often improve that as well, and the lung health of your entire family.

Whole house water filters come in several styles, but most include a three-part filtration system. Water coming into your home passes through a sediment tank first, where any large contaminants are allowed to settle out. The purer water passes through a carbon or ceramic filter after this, where most chemical and bacterial contaminants are filtered out by activated charcoal or diatomaceous earth. The last stage sends your water through a redox potential high filter, a metallic style filter that takes the chlorine out of your water. Some house water filters also include a UV purifier to kill any bacterial or other biological contaminants. At the end, almost every contaminant is removed from your water, but the positive minerals calcium and fluoride are still there, where they give your water a better taste and also contribute to your family's health.

Choose your whole house water filter carefully. You'll need to find out what contaminants are in your water at the main source; if you have no idea how to go about this, your water company may test it for you for free, or they'll be able to tell you where to go to have it tested. Worry more about removing all the contaminants that are a problem in your water than about how much your filter is going to cost; it will pay for itself, but only if you get every contaminant at the source. And find out how and when to change filters, and how much filters are going to add to your bill each year.

Trent Barrett is a consultant who writes for Home water purifiers. You can visit their homepage to learn more about home water purification systems



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Last update by T. Barrett, Thursday, May 22nd 2008

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