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Does anyone have one of those PUR faucet filters?
I am thinking of getting one but they have the one where you turn the whole housing "egg" to activate it, and they have the new one with a little knob you turn and it has an indicator light on it. Just wondering if anyone has feedback from actual use.
Mike |
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For the most part these Brita/Pur jug & faucet filters are a sugar pill IMO.
If you have one,, and think it works,,, then go on Ebay and buy a cheap TDS meter (or find a Saltwater aquarist and borrow one). Test your tapwater's Total Dissolved Solids with the meter before and after it has been through the filter. The results will likely confirm these filters take very little out of the water (mostly cloramines),, if anything. If you want pure water then get a proper RO/DI unit with submicron and carbon filters,,, you can get them at LOWES. The previous owner of my home had one installed in our kitchen and it can reduce the dissolved contaminents in our water from 176ppm to under 1ppm. Very impressive I guess,,,It makes the clearest ice cubes you've ever seen, but demineralized water does not taste particularly good to me,,,especially when used to make Coffee ,, so I rarely use it. Hey, I never said it was an interesting story. |
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Works for me
We've got a Pur filter on our kitchen faucet and it seems to work fine. Filters last 10-12 months.
When we vacation at the beach we always take one of the Britta filters with us. Tap water at the beach is horrible but the Britta makes it clear and taste fine. I generally refill a plastic water bottle with filtered tap water instead of buying bottled water. It's cheaper and you still have the convenience of the screw top plastic bottle. |
Hi,
Thanks for the replies. I was wondering why they changed the design, maybe the new one leaks less? We have very good water here, my only complaint is the chlorine taste is pretty high sometimes. I don't remember it being that way when I moved here in '99 but it seemed like after 911 they started using more chlorine, maybe just a coincidence. I was leaning toward the caraffe style, then I read Consumer Reports (yeah I don't trust them necessarily) and they seem to rate the faucet mounted ones better, however they did not rate how well it reduces chlorine taste. Their taste test involved how well it removed the taste of "cabbage water"! Hmmmm.... Maybe I will reconsider the jug style Brita. Mike |
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I'd prefer the jug style, that filters the water as you fill it. Less obtrusive and you can keep it cold in the fridge.
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I second this post entirely. For thirty years my parents carted 'city water' to a house we owned. The PUR and Brita didn't change anything. Got an RO unit last year and it works great. My hair doesn't even stand out like Robert Smith's anymore after I take a shower there:D |
My wellwater gave it a life span of about 2 weeks.
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Well I got myself one of the PUR pitchers for 19.99. It says it removes 97% of the chlorine taste so that ought to do the trick! And if any of you own Proctor and Gamble stock I just helped a bit.
Mike |
been using a pur faucet-mount for about 6 years w/ no problems. in fact, i had a leak in one and proctor and gamble replaced it for free. i notice it really takes the chlorine smell and taste out so i like that. if does anything else it is worth it in my opinion.
gregg |
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:D |
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