โJan-13-2014 12:03 PM
โMar-12-2014 01:38 PM
roamermatt wrote:
These are highly regarded and it would seem a great way to extend boondocking time. Can treat stream or lake water in fairly large quantities to drinking-water quality. Only issue is they are fairly large and meant to sit on a countertop, so it could take up valuable space.
http://www.bigberkeywaterfilters.com/berkey-water-filters/berkey-filter-systems.html
โFeb-03-2014 08:25 AM
zman-az wrote:
If you "really" want clean water RO is the only way to go.
โJan-28-2014 08:57 AM
โJan-27-2014 02:05 PM
greenrvgreen wrote:
The Red Dye test is a demonstration by makers of carbon-cake filters to show their product in a more favorable light. Ceramic filters that exclude pathogens will still pass red dye (and salt). Your water is safe to drink, but red.
The black filters employ activated charcoal which will trap the red dye. However, water eventually forms paths around the charcoal and pathogens end up in your drinking water. This is why these filters are not approved for water purification, no matter how many times the NSF standards are met by private testing firms. It's not that they don't finely filter the water, it's that the filter is not a reliable barrier over time.
โJan-27-2014 11:54 AM
โJan-27-2014 10:56 AM
bobtammy1998 wrote:
We have had a big berkey for 6 months. Water tasted great. Recently in Yuma, we were getting a salty taste from the municipal water AFTER filtering. Wife said she was experiencing bloating. Contacted Berkey and they said to perform the red dye test. Water was red especially from one of the two filters. berkey told us to send the filters back and they would replace them for $25. Told us that the Berkey does not filter salt from water. Thought that was strange because it is city water.
So filters are on the way to Berkey after very extensive protocol. Will see what happens when they ship us new filters.
โJan-26-2014 03:01 PM
โJan-17-2014 05:49 PM
โJan-17-2014 12:28 PM
roamermatt wrote:
To clarify, Berkey filters are classified as "purifiers" because they remove 99.999% of pathogens and viruses. They do not merely make the water taste better.
http://www.berkeyfilters.com/berkey-answers/performance/filtration-specifications/
They also work without electricity or pressure. They work solely by gravity. And for the volume of water they can produce (~3 gallons/hour for a small model) they take up very little space.
All this is why I consider them useful for boondocking. I'm merely wondering if anyone uses them this way, where you place it in your RV, how you refill it with water, whether there are any unique maintenance issues, etc.
Dave: Thanks for reporting your experience at home with a Berkey. Confirms what I've heard from others.
Greenrv: Thanks for your report. If you are not using a Berkey filter, what filter are you using? By "candles" I presume you mean filter elements. How are these arranged in your system? Is it home-built or off-the-shelf?
The reason I am considering such a system is I will be traveling in a truck camper that has only a 30-gallon water tank. I may want to stay longer in one place than one tankful can serve.
โJan-15-2014 06:01 PM
โJan-15-2014 12:53 PM
โJan-15-2014 07:57 AM
โJan-14-2014 08:44 PM
โJan-14-2014 02:15 PM