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ZeroWater Z-Pitcher

by Brian Yalung on Sunday, March 8th, 2009
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Healthy water to consume has become an issue most of the time and normally, we would either buy bottled water (which contribute to plastic waste issues) or filtration systems that often carry the question of dependability. Like air, water is a hard thing to quantify. As long as it isn’t cloudy or strangely flavored, it seems interchangeable with any other. One way to separate hose water from the triple-distilled purified variety is by using a TDS meter, which measures the level of salts, minerals and anything alien in your water.

The ZeroWater filtration system, on the other hand, got its name for purifying tap water and consistently producing a zero on TDS meters. While comparable water filtration pitchers rely solely on chlorine, the ZeroWater system uses a five-stage ion-exchange filtration system that removes any discernible additives. And ZeroWater is so confident in their product that they include an independently-manufactured TDS meter with each purchase.

The ZeroWater Z-Pitcher can be purchased for $40

(Source) Cool Hunting

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Wow. Our water system is something I’ve been reading about lately. Frankly, it frightens me how many toxins and junk are floating around our water (yes, this includes bottled water). I currently use a Brita filtration system, but my biggest gripe is that I can’t really tell if it’s working or not. As Brian stated, water tends to taste the same unless it has an increased flow of iron or other taste altering substances.

This pitcher seems like a great bet with a testing system included. I hope they come out with a faucet filtration system (it makes it easier for people who drink a lot of water like me so a pitcher isn’t constantly having to be filled up). Also, do they report how many average refills this item sustains?

Comment by Alison — March 10, 2009 @ 4:12 pm

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