  DC DSL Stays crunchy even in milk Premium join:2000-07-30 Washington, DC | reply to NotRequired Re: for those that use a water filteration systems,
The Pur ones (gold wrappers). Package of three for $36 at Bed, Bath and Beyond or 6/$50 at Costco. -- There is no giant fur-bearing trout. |
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  Jahntassa What, I can have feathers Premium join:2006-04-14 Conway, SC
| When I had one at my last house, I had an under-sink filter that was supposed to be good for 6 months. I think the initial outlay was less than $40 and new filters were around $20.
The 'easy use' filters like in pitchers and the one you put on sink faucets aren't worth it IMO. |
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  DC DSL Stays crunchy even in milk Premium join:2000-07-30 Washington, DC
·Covad Communications
·Verizon Online DSL
| I had an under-sink system in the condo I had in CT 25 years ago. The filters lasted about 3 months and were $25 to replace. Unit cost like $60. It worked well.
The Pur faucet filter works quite well. They switch our chemicals once a year for 6 weeks from chloramine to chlorine to flush the system. Zero odor or taste in the filtered stuff, compared to it being worse than an over-chlorinated swimming pool from the unfiltered taps. -- There is no giant fur-bearing trout. |
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  NotRequired Premium join:2009-05-08
·AT&T DSL Service
| reply to DC DSL said by DC DSL :The Pur ones (gold wrappers). Package of three for $36 at Bed, Bath and Beyond or 6/$50 at Costco. thanks will look at home depot whats offered,will also see what is offered for bottle water "j" -- A lie gets halfway around the world & is believed
before the truth ever has a chance to be spoken. |
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  DC DSL Stays crunchy even in milk Premium join:2000-07-30 Washington, DC
·Covad Communications
·Verizon Online DSL
| You need to make sure you get in writing from the vendor the specific source(s) of their water. A lot of places take water from the same public supply as you get, and just filter the hell out of it.
You specifically want to know the filtration process used and resultant mineral content (and whether it's natural or added back in). Too often filtered public supply water has almost no mineral content left, which makes it less healthful than what comes out of your tap.
If it's spring water, do some research on the spring and make sure it's far removed from any type of agricultural or operation that disturbs the surface or could run-off into the aquifer. -- There is no giant fur-bearing trout. |
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