Home Water Purifiers


Home water systems. Water purifying made easy.


Water Purification News and Information


Easy Water Purifier Installations

A faucet water purifier is simple to fit and use. These are the easiest to install and don't require you to use any tools. If your main objective is to ensure availability of clean drinking water in your home and don't like to spend money on a cartridge filtration system, a faucet water purifier is the best option.

All you have to do to install it is to unscrew the aerator on your sink's spout and screw the filter to it.

You have to replace the filter cartridges in this type of filter regularly. Some people may complain that a faucet water purifier reduce the pressure of water, but most of them are not bothered by it.

A faucet water purifier unit will only remove particles and contaminants from the water in the sink that has the filter attached. Most people consider the kitchen sink to be suitable to fit the faucet water purifier as they do the cooking, cleaning of food items and collecting of drinking water in the kitchen.

Some people fit a separate filter in the bathrooms where they wash their hands and brush their teeth. Since most water purifier are very...
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Reverse osmosis water filter systems

Reverse osmosis water filter systems Manufacturers and marketers have overstated the usefulness of reverse osmosis water filter systems for home use. As a primary or secondary stage treatment in a large plant or facility this process is useful, but even then it does not meet the somewhat lax government standards for public drinking water. It still has a long way to go before being clean enough to be called safe drinking water. Tap water contains over 2000 known carcinogens.

Filtering water by reverse osmosis blocks only a small number of these. Reverse osmosis relies on a porous membrane through which water is forced at high pressure. Depending on the size of the pores, some chemicals are blocked while other pass through. When a chemical is dissolved in water, most of the resulting molecular sizes are smaller than the size of the water. It stands to reason that if the water is able to pass through the membrane, the majority of the chemicals dissolved in it will go right through as well.

The needs of a user wanting an in home water purification system don't match what reverse osmosis treatment was intended to do. If there is visible...
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Water Purifier Search Engine
Why Consider A Reverse Osmosis Water Filter?
By Trent Barrett



Reverse osmosis water filters are often used to purify bottled water, taking water right out of the tap and running it through a filtration system before selling it to you in those convenient and expensive bottles. You're not limited to purchasing water purified this way; instead, consider installing a filter to clean your water system. These filters run water through a membrane that allows only clean water to pass through; all other contaminants, from germs to chlorine, remain on the other side of the membrane and are flushed from the system. Almost every major contaminant is removed from your water with this method: chlorine and fluoride, arsenic, heavy metals, nitrates and pesticides, iron (you can get too much), sediments, bacteria and viruses, and even bad taste and smell.


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Because of its effectiveness at removing contaminants, a reverse osmosis water filter is often called a hyperfiltration system. It works by sending water from your municipal or private supply through a series of small reservoirs in the filter unit, each containing the osmotic membrane. In the reservoir, clean water moves to the clean side of the filter, leaving contaminants behind. Water passes through via osmosis, not water pressure as is more common for other filters. That means that this filtration system is painfully slow. To address this problem, osmotic water systems include a tank where your clean water is deposited, providing a reservoir of drinking water in the amount of about fifteen gallons each day. This water is of bottled water quality, and if you buy bottled water every day, you can imagine how much money this can save you.

There are two types of membranes typical to reverse osmosis water filters. A thin film composite (TFC) membrane is very good at removing contaminants, but it is also very susceptible to damage from chlorinated water supplies. An activated carbon pre-filtration system may need to be installed upstream of your TFC membrane to remove chlorine before it gets to the membrane. The other type of membrane is the cellulose triacetate (CTA) filter, which is also good at removing contaminants though inferior to the TFC, but does not have a problem processing chlorine. Make sure before installing your water filtration system that you have the membrane most appropriate to your water system; a damaged membrane can force you to replace your entire filtration system.


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For water that is contaminated with bacteria or other biological organisms, you may also need an ultraviolet filter. While an osmotic filter works quite well on biological organisms, it does not catch all of them; while one particle of mercury in your cleansed water will not kill you, a single bacterium in your clean water reservoir can multiply and eventually contaminate your entire osmotic water filtration system. To prevent this problem, add a UV water purifier to the downstream side of your filtration system. UV light is used to kill everything living in your water, which prevents your water from further contamination. This three-filter system - activated carbon, reverse osmosis, and UV purifier - will provide you and your family with the cleanest possible water supply.

The only drawback to the reverse osmosis water filtration system: it takes an enormous amount of water to produce those fifteen gallons a day, up to ten gallons of water for each clean gallon of water provided. Waste water from your reverse osmosis system should be redirected into a gray water reservoir if you live in a drought-prone area, where it can be used later to water your lawn.




Water Purification News and Information


Why Install Whole House Water Filters?

In certain parts of the country and the world, it may be a good idea to install whole house water filters anywhere you are concerned about the water quality. These filters are installed at the beginning of your water system, before any water reaches the hot water tank, and depending on the type of whole house water filter you've chosen, they can remove a whole range of contaminants before any water reaches you or your family.

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There are some very good reasons for installing whole house water filters. For one, these devices remove much of the chlorine in your water, eliminating the growing modern problem of chloroform contamination in your house when chlorine vaporizes in the shower or when you run hot water devices. For another, they can contribute toward softening your water, eliminating many of the minerals that make your soaps and shampoos work poorly and saving you money. In addition, fewer contaminants means you won't have residue on your body, your shower wall, or your dishes.

With a whole house water filter, you won't have to have a separate water filter for your drinking...
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Why Home Water Purifiers and Filters Are Important To You

With an aging water infrastructure and breakdowns becoming more common, home water purifiers and filters are increasing in importance. You are the last line of defense against contaminated water.

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Even "safe" municipal systems contain escalating levels of chlorine, which can make you sick, and may contain contaminants that, while safe, have an unpleasant odor and/or taste. If you start using a home water purifier, however, you can spare yourself the worry about problematic water supplies and start supplying your home with inexpensive bottled-quality water.

Your home water purifiers and filters are your last line of defense if your city water system does break down. Read the news. More often these days, we hear about some critical piece of infrastructure running into serious problems - steam pipes exploding in New York City, bridges collapsing in Minnesota, and let's not even talk about New Orleans.

City municipal water systems are also suffering from this infrastructure decay, but because the effects are less dramatic, you don't hear about it on the evening news. Instead, you may notice that your water smells more strongly of chlorine than you remembered, or that it's a...
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