• @[email protected]
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    109 months ago

    I just drink the tap water. It’s ok. Letting it sit for a few hours to let the chlorine escape helps the taste. I haven’t thought those pitchers to be any good but who knows. If I really wanted to filter the water, I’d look at an MSR gravity filter or similar.

  • Monkey With A Shell
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    79 months ago

    An absurd amalgamation of a 4 part while house filter, a softener, and an under sink reverse osmosis thing for drinking water.

    The water here has enough dissolved solids in it that before I put in that stuff if the pipes got a pinhole leak in them it would seal itself within a couple hours at the expense of everything having a white crust on it.

  • @[email protected]
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    69 months ago

    I’m based in London, the water is really hard and drinking water, and more importantly tea is so much better with any sort of filtration.

    I use a refillable filter called Phox—they’re a smaller UK brand that offers three types of refills: one that just filters, one that filters and softens (my choice), and one called the Alkaline pack which maintains calcium and adds magnesium and ups the pH.

    I used to use Brita filters and the amount of plastic waste would really bug me. I’d definitely get a filtration system installed if I owned my own home but Phox feels like a good solution in the meantime.

    …not that owning my own place in London is going to happen, but a poor little wage slave can dream.

  • Bluu
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    59 months ago

    Zerowater. It’s alright. I like the taste, but the replacement filters are pretty expensive.

    We had some construction a few years back where they replaced the water pipes across our area of the city. For about two years while the project was going on, our water would randomly turn brown or orange for days… we used to drink straight tap water, but not any more.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      I used to use them. They’re cheapest if you order directly from their website in bulk. And subscribe to their emails. I think around January and February they usually have like 10 for 120$ or something.

      • Bluu
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        29 months ago

        I had no idea. Thanks for tip! Definitely going to look into it!

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          Hey, got an email today. They have 25% off their entire site with the code water25. Good until the 7th. Their prices for filters went up like everything else but you can get 16 for 150$ with that code.

          • Bluu
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            29 months ago

            It worked! Wow, thank you so much! Seriously, you are awesome.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      Yup agreed. I’ve tried brita and pur, and pur tastes the closest to NYC water to me, which is my benchmark for the best-tasting water. Definitely not as good as NYC, but closest I’ve come.

  • @[email protected]
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    59 months ago

    I don’t drink water. I fill my tea kettle from the tap, as chlorine evaporates rapidly and completely from hot water. I usually drink two pints this way (one coffee and one herbal tea), and I drink a can of fizzy water at lunch, and maybe a beer with dinner.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      Most things won’t get rid of color. Usually RO systems are needed for that. Does depend on what is causing the color though.

  • TheOrcWhoWrites
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    39 months ago

    I use a Brita tank but the filters are generic made to fit in Brita water tanks.

    • edric
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      29 months ago

      Same. I just buy store brand generic filters for my Brita.

  • @[email protected]
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    29 months ago

    I use the Aarke filter, mostly because it has hardly any plastic, and works fantastically. I’m considering getting the water2 installed so all my taps are filtered clean water, with the rise of micro plastic concerns, I use filtered water even for cooking.