Differences between filtering Rainwater vs Town and City Water
https://www.mywaterfilter.com.au/benc... https://www.mywaterfilter.com.au/unde... https://www.mywaterfilter.com.au/reve... Hi and welcome to our video on Differences between filtering Rainwater vs Town and City Water. To learn more, please click the link above If you have any questions or if we can help you with anything, please contact us on 1800 769 300 or jump over onto our live chat on MyWaterFilter.com.au Transcription: G'day folks. Rod from My Water Filter here today, and what we're gonna do is just have a quick look at the differences required for filtering some rainwater versus filtering town and city chlorinated, treated water, okay? So my preference is always the rainwater, because it hasn't had anything added to it. By that, I mean chlorine and chemicals, et cetera, but with rainwater, there's still some treatment required, depending on how you're storing your water and what's going on at your home, alright? So rain lands on the roof, into the gutter, and into your tank, okay? So these problems associated with rainwater are generally sediment, and that comes out of any tank, whatever you've got. So a prefilter is a good idea, okay? A sediment prefilter will take the lumps and bumps out of the water. This can be outside on the whole home, and then you don't need it under the sink or up on the kitchen benchtop at your filter. But if you've got no filtration prior to your home, I would use a prefilter if I was drawing rainwater into the home. The second stage is basically the bugs have gotta be stopped, okay? And heavy metals, lead on the roof, flashings, the water can be a little acidic, so it can be eating out the copper pipe, so you can have a lot of copper coming in as well. So the ultra-pure cartridges, the Coldstream cartridges are fantastic for rainwater, because they'll remove those heavy metals and the herbicides and the pesticides and block the bugs, because they're a ceramic cartridge, okay? So that's normally where we'll go is with a ceramic for the bugs. Then, if you've got a concrete water tank, well the lime tends to leach out of the walls of the concrete and mix with the water, and that will elevate the acidic rainwater up to a neutral pH around the seven mark, so when water's neutral, it's not eating into the copper pipe on the home or attacking the home appliances, and it's good for you, too. So we always want people to be drinking the water higher than seven, so if you've got a concrete tank, you could simply have a prefilter and a Coldstream or an ultra-pure water filter, just a twin system like that, you'd say, and you'll be good to go. Lime's coming out of the concrete walls and elevating the pH of your water. If you have a other type of water tank, now this could be poly nowadays are used a lot, the bolt-together steel tanks with the big liner bag inside, basically any other form of water tank except concrete, there's no lime leaching out of the walls, so you've got no interaction, no way to elevate or alter the pH of the water. So at that point in time, it's good to have a third cartridge, alright? And that third cartridge, there's a couple of different ways you can go. We have a pH neutralizer, okay? Mostly calcium in the water, so we're neutralizing the water, elevating the pH just up to seven, just so people are drinking neutral water, alright? And then following that, you can see this filter here, this has got an alkahydrate cartridge in it. So this got a 10-inch drop-in cartridge in here, full of all different sorts of minerals. This is more likely to elevate the pH of the drinking water up to nine when they're new, slowly come back down eight, 8.5, and that will fade away over time, but these will give you a much higher pH-level than a pH neutralizer, alright? So there's two styles there. So that's pretty simple for rainwater, and as I say, there's a little bit of heavy metal could've come off your roof, the paint, maybe the copper out of the pipes, herbicides, pesticides blowing there in the wind, alright? Not a whole lot of contamination with rain water, so a great way to go, if we treat it right, and we get a beautiful product flowing out the tap, alright? Now government water, town water, city water starts like this, starts as rainwater, but there's a lot of people living in our cities nowadays, and it's obviously a super big challenge for the government and our local shires, et cetera to keep the water supply to everybody's home. A growing population makes it harder every day, so the water being delivered to your home by the government, it is of a reasonable quality, but there's a lot of chemical in it. To view the Full Transcription Click Here: https://www.mywaterfilter.com.au/diff...

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