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Product Name: | ZeroWater® 7 Cup Ready-Pour® Filtered Pour-Through Water Pitcher - Blue |
Product Description: | ZeroWater® filters out 99.6% of all dissolved solids for the purest tasting water. Rather than filtering with a conventional 2-stage system, ZeroWater® premium 5-Stage filtration process filters out virtually all dissolved solids from your tap water including salts, lead, chemicals, fluoride, minerals and runoff. This process removes suspended solids such as dust and rust that may make water appear cloudy. It then removes organic contaminants including pesticides, herbicides, Mercury, Chlorine, Chloramine, and stops bacteria from growing. Finally, it filters out metals, nonmetals and radiological contaminants. ZeroWater® is the only pour-through water filtration system Certified by the NSF for the reduction of both lead & chromium and other heavy metals, and exceeds the FDAs definition of purified bottled water. Filter life can vary depending on water quality. Get More Out of Your Water. |
Manufacturer: | ZeroWater |
Product SKU: | 864700811 |
UPC: | 188781000614 |
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This filter uses a form of ion exchange technology. It captures TDS from the water and releases H+ and OH-, which ends up as H2O. This is not new, it is just marketing this for home use. In large scale applications you can regenerate the resin and reuse it. This appears to be pretty wasteful in just throwing it away.
One concern I have for this technology is that if you use this filter long enough the resin gets full and will start to release some of the contaminants it removed. I saw a comment from someone saying he uses this for arsenic removal, that is a situation that might make me think twice and be diligent about swapping these out before they reach breakthrough.
My tap water in LA has 395 PPM of dissolved solids, my San Diego house is 225. A Brita is around 85. My RO system is 28. Bottled water is around 60+, but they add minerals. This is literally ZERO.
Each filter lasts about a month, depends on how bad your water is to start with.
This should come with one filter, and probably a TDS meter. Basically making the pitcher free.
Drawback is the pitcher, water can spill out from the top. Better off with the countertop version, less refilling too.
Don't trust the photo.
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Is it really 3 filters? It doesn't say anything in description. Only a picture shows that - is that a mistake I wonder
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My tap water in LA has 395 PPM of dissolved solids, my San Diego house is 225. A Brita is around 85. My RO system is 28. Bottled water is around 60+, but they add minerals. This is literally ZERO.
Each filter lasts about a month, depends on how bad your water is to start with.
This should come with one filter, and probably a TDS meter. Basically making the pitcher free.
Drawback is the pitcher, water can spill out from the top. Better off with the countertop version, less refilling too.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jnemezis
Don't trust the photo.
from their website " ZeroWater's 5 Stage Ion Exchange Filter is the only pour-through water filter NSF certified to reduce lead, chromium, and PFOA/PFOS. It also removes 99.6% of all dissolved solids from your tap water – more than any other leading brand."
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My tap water in LA has 395 PPM of dissolved solids, my San Diego house is 225. A Brita is around 85. My RO system is 28. Bottled water is around 60+, but they add minerals. This is literally ZERO.
Each filter lasts about a month, depends on how bad your water is to start with.
This should come with one filter, and probably a TDS meter. Basically making the pitcher free.
Drawback is the pitcher, water can spill out from the top. Better off with the countertop version, less refilling too.
Forgive me but I find this hard to believe, but it do seems like you measured.. reverse osmosis removes even salt. If what you said is true why are desalination plants not loading up with this technology and how can gravity be enough when RO is supposedly less effective but requires much greater pressures?
Anyway not saying you're wrong… just doesn't work out in my head. I'll do some research I guess?
Edit: even the product page says this removes 99.6% of dissolved solids. That's a lot, but it's not 100% as your post implies. So I'm still confused
Anyway not saying you're wrong… just doesn't work out in my head. I'll do some reason I guess?
Edit: even the product page says this removes 99.6% of dissolved solids. That's a lot, but it's not 100% as your post implies. So I'm still confused
Test the water after, I've seen these pop 0 on TDS meters.
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