Reverse osmosis is a common filtration process used extensively in industry and agriculture.
A reverse osmosis water filter is often the choice for a home filtration system.
There are some problems, however, with a reverse osmosis filter.
Read this article to find out what they are and what the solution is.
With all of the information coming out recently about the impurities in our water, home filtration has turned into a hot topic.
Our water has everything in it from pesticides to prescription drugs to toxic chemicals.
For instance, chlorine is the chemical generally used to kill organic impurities in municipal water.
Well, chlorine is a poison! Chlorine gas has been used even recently as a weapon of mass destruction! There are trace amounts of chlorine in the water that comes out of your tap.
A lot of people think bottled water offers a good alternative to tap water.
Unfortunately, they are incorrect! Bottled water has to be no purer than tap water.
As a matter of fact, when talking about some impurities, like e-coli, there are no federal restrictions on the amount of the impurity that can be in bottled water.
Bottled water companies spend millions upon millions trying to get us to believe their water comes from pristine glaciers or underground aquifers.
The truth is very different.
Most bottled water comes straight out of a tap-just like the water in your house! Filtering your own water is really the only real solution.
But then that leads to a new set of problems.
There are several types of filters available on the market.
Some use carbon filtration, some use reverse osmosis, some use other methods.
Reverse osmosis works fairly well to filter out impurities, but a big part of the problem with it is it filters out too much! A reverse osmosis water filter is commonly used to desalinate water.
Also, it's often used in industry and agriculture where issues like taste are not that important.
Water filtered with reverse osmosis filters is often used in car washes because reverse osmosis filters virtually everything out of the water, in this case impurities that might harm paint.
The problem with reverse osmosis for drinking water is this: you actually want some impurities in your water.
Trace minerals such as calcium not only make water taste great, but they are incredibly important to your health.
Although a reverse osmosis filter might be better than nothing (at least in some cases), there are other filtration systems that filter out the bad stuff while leaving in what we need for good taste and optimum health.
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