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#1
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Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier?
There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke |
#2
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Dick Locke wrote in
: Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier? There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke While UV magic MIGHT kill some bacteria in pond water, calling it water purification is criminal..... Of course, I'm the guy with the STEAM DISTILLER that makes PURE WATER, so pure it doesn't conduct electricity....and tastes supreme with simple activated carbon polishing to get out the distillates like Benzene, which attaches itself nicely to activated carbon atoms. (Gives distilled water that metallic taste.) UV purification....that's almost funny! http://www.waterwise.com/productcart...p?idproduct=24 Here's my favorite, a simple kitchen appliance that's very efficient and makes about 1.2 gallons per load in a couple of hours. The condensor is stainless steel, the carafe is polycarbonate. Neither creates a taste and the carafe goes right in the fridge with a tiny footprint. About 25c/load electric bill...not counting the air conditioning loading from the Btu pollution coming out the top...(c; We tested it against the seawater in the Ashley River at home. I distilled a load of water straight out of the river, downstream from two sewage plants by the way...tidal water. The resultant output was 3.2ppm total dissolved solids on the meter and tasted just the same as city water from the tap. Of course, the difference was in cleaning out the salt, dissolved mud (well, maybe that wasn't mud) and dead biology left in the boiler....including one boiled tiny crab. I bet the crab would have survived UV "purification"....(c; -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
#3
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On Fri, 15 Sep 2006 17:24:06 -0400, Larry wrote:
Dick Locke wrote in : Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier? There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke While UV magic MIGHT kill some bacteria in pond water, calling it water purification is criminal..... Of course, I'm the guy with the STEAM DISTILLER that makes PURE WATER, so pure it doesn't conduct electricity....and tastes supreme with simple activated carbon polishing to get out the distillates like Benzene, which attaches itself nicely to activated carbon atoms. (Gives distilled water that metallic taste.) UV purification....that's almost funny! http://www.waterwise.com/productcart...p?idproduct=24 Here's my favorite, a simple kitchen appliance that's very efficient and makes about 1.2 gallons per load in a couple of hours. The condensor is stainless steel, the carafe is polycarbonate. Neither creates a taste and the carafe goes right in the fridge with a tiny footprint. About 25c/load electric bill...not counting the air conditioning loading from the Btu pollution coming out the top...(c; We tested it against the seawater in the Ashley River at home. I distilled a load of water straight out of the river, downstream from two sewage plants by the way...tidal water. The resultant output was 3.2ppm total dissolved solids on the meter and tasted just the same as city water from the tap. Of course, the difference was in cleaning out the salt, dissolved mud (well, maybe that wasn't mud) and dead biology left in the boiler....including one boiled tiny crab. I bet the crab would have survived UV "purification"....(c; If I'd said "disinfection" instead of "purification" would it have been better? |
#4
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Dick Locke wrote in
: If I'd said "disinfection" instead of "purification" would it have been better? A little. Only trouble with killing off the bacteria is the bacteria falls apart, releasing some really nasty toxins into the water, after "disinfection". This is what happens to people with RO systems. The bacteria pile up on the membrane then the pressure breaks them down and releases the toxins into the water flow, right through the membrane because these toxins are tiny molecules the membrane can't filter....Makes you sick as a dog. RO people don't like to talk about it....(c; I have this thing about drinking dead bugs, too. I know I eat dead bugs every time I put a piece of steak or chicken or dead pig or any veggie, especially uncooked veggies like lettuce at the salad bar into my pie hole, so I don't need to be reminded. Hell, the bugs in the salad bars are still alive! But, I just don't like to drink them...(c; -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
#5
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Larry wrote:
Dick Locke wrote in : If I'd said "disinfection" instead of "purification" would it have been better? A little. Only trouble with killing off the bacteria is the bacteria falls apart, releasing some really nasty toxins into the water, after "disinfection". This is what happens to people with RO systems. The bacteria pile up on the membrane then the pressure breaks them down and releases the toxins into the water flow, right through the membrane because these toxins are tiny molecules the membrane can't filter....Makes you sick as a dog. RO people don't like to talk about it....(c; I have this thing about drinking dead bugs, too. I know I eat dead bugs every time I put a piece of steak or chicken or dead pig or any veggie, especially uncooked veggies like lettuce at the salad bar into my pie hole, so I don't need to be reminded. Hell, the bugs in the salad bars are still alive! But, I just don't like to drink them...(c; Better dead bugs than the live ones I say. We've been drinking RO water for about five years and have missed out on a lot of the "flu" that has gone around our neighborhood. Can't comment on the toxins except to say that so far they haven't seemed to make us sick. One filter and membrane change in five years, starting from city drinking water, and taking the dissolved solids down from ~215 PPM to ~10 PPM while taking out most or all of the bacteria that has survived the chlorine. ==serious run on sentence, but I'm gonna let it stand as written. Larry, you gotta remember that the outside of the RO membrane is constantly being flushed by the water running past it. That is why we run 10 gallons of city water for each gallon of RO water that we make. Now, I only wish that I could plumb the flush water to water the plants and the lawn, or something instead of just running it down the drain. Don W. |
#6
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Don W wrote in news:6J3Pg.3167
: That is why we run 10 gallons of city water for each gallon of RO water that we make. Now, I only wish that I could plumb the flush water to water the plants and the lawn, or something instead of just running it down the drain. Wow...I didn't know it would use a thousand gallons of water just to make a hundred. I recover about 99.5% with the little distillers. The boiler's nearly dry when the thermostat cuts it off. Why couldn't you run the flush water into a 55 gallon drum with an overflow to the drain, open to the air so there's no backpressure, then use a sump pump with the float switch built into it in the "tank" to feed water to the garden and lawn sprinklers? Harbor Freight has some dandy sump pumps real cheap from the Chinese slavers. You'd have a 55 gallon "reserve" when you turned it on, draining the tank into the yard when it would shut itself down. Build it all into a storage building or in the garage if you have one. I don't run the distiller in the house, except in winter when I recover 100% of the heat to supplement home heating. I'll bring it in from my storage building next month and run it from midnight which eliminates heating the house for another month those nights it runs. I may have to reconsider where it's run after I get the Frybrid (www.frybrid.com) installed in the diesel car. The storage building will be full of "fuel" in 5 gallon plastic jugs, settling out solids from the various restaurants for a month before I run it through the polishing filters and into the car. That's going to consume a lot of space in the shed...(c; I've got nearly 250 gallons per month promised from a group of restaurants within a mile of home, if I want it. I'm going to have free fuel running out my ears, shortly. I think a Frybrid-powered diesel generator could take me totally off the grid to run nearly for free. There's oil pouring out of restaurants all across the country, throwing good fuel into the recycling dumpster they pay to have hauled off. How stupid is that? -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
#7
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![]() Dick Locke wrote: Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier? There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke Dick, UV does not "purify" water. With a high enough single dose, or constant recirculation at a lower dose, you can "sanitize" water, and you can break down dissolve ozone. With the amount of power you'd want to consume on a boat, you'd be hard pressed to accomplish much with a UV unit. Keith Hughes |
#8
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I have been happy with several MiniPure UV system that I have had. I have
used them as point of use and, in my last boat, after the water maker prior to going into the tanks. Smallest unit consumes about 14 watts. "Keith Hughes" wrote in message ... Dick Locke wrote: Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier? There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke Dick, UV does not "purify" water. With a high enough single dose, or constant recirculation at a lower dose, you can "sanitize" water, and you can break down dissolve ozone. With the amount of power you'd want to consume on a boat, you'd be hard pressed to accomplish much with a UV unit. Keith Hughes |
#9
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Dick Locke wrote:
Does anyone have recommendations on a brand of UV water purifier? There seem to be one heckuva lot of manufacturers and I'd like to weed it down before starting. Dick Locke You can find some useful, objective information he http://www.lbl.gov/Education/ELSI/Fr...stain21-f.html UV Water Purification Chuck ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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