Mobilesport said:I worked at a water plant back in 2005 , there was a scientists that had a bucket outside of his Lab that he used to take samples of the citys water supply , he would throw a live fish in the bucket and the fish either stayed alive or he died , i think that's how he figured out whether his chemical mixtures were right.
What this means I don't know but at the time it was kind of spooky.
Stevesway said:I would NEVER drink water from any river, lake, stream, or any other source that is unknown for what is in it. And in my opinion, you don't know what is in that water unless you have it tested.
I think using the filtering you are speaking of or any other filtering except by a municipal water purification plant is taking unnecessary chances with your health. This is not being paranoid or worrying too much.......it's just common sense.
There are too many places out there to get good clean safe water to be taking needless chances of getting sick. If you are going to be out for awhile just make sure that you bring enough good drinking water to last for awhile. When you start to run out head back to civilization and get more.
You only have one life, so take care of it as best that you can.
If you have your health you have everything.
How about boiling the water too to make it a three stage approach , Or would that be unnecessary?Optimistic Paranoid said:Some notes and thoughts on purifying wilderness water:
A micron is 1 thousandth of a millimeter.
Water filter cartidges will be marked in microns – 20 microns, 10 microns, 5 microns, etc. The best I've run across is a ceramic filter cartridge from Doulton rated as 0.9 microns.
The following information was cribbed from a water filter test that appeared in a 2009 edition of OVERLAND JOURNAL.
“PROTOZOA: Protozoa are generally the largest, and are responsible for such lovely conditions as amoebic dysentery and giardiasis. These are small (2 to 15 microns) hard-shelled cysts that can live out of water for a short time and are usually transmitted through a fecal/oral pathway – in other words, from drinking water in which an infected animal has defecated. Most modern filters can physically remove protozoa, which are very resistant to chemical treatment. Cryptosporidium is resistant to iodine and chlorine, each of which needs significant contact time (on the order of four hours) to be at all effective.
BACTERIA: Bacteria vary in size greatly (0.6 microns in diameter to over 100 microns long) and cause cholera, typhoid fever, dysentery, and salmonellosis. They are single cell organisms that are common to our body, but the pathogenic varieties need to be removed from water. Larger pore size filters are unable to remove small bacteria, but chemicals such as iodine or chlorine, as well as ultra-violet radiation, are quite effective.
VIRUSES: Viruses are the smallest of all the biological pathogens. These are parasitic particles comprising a strand of DNA or RNA that invade living cells and redirect the cell to produce more viruses. On the order of 0.02 to 0.1 microns in size, they present a challenge to remove physically, but are susceptible to chemical attack, and can be killed by iodine, chlorine, and radiation. Viruses are responsible for such aliments as hepatitis A, polio, and gastroenteritis.”
Based on the above info, I came to the conclusion that the best approach was a two-stage one. Treat the water with chlorine bleach, and then use an activated carbon filter that would remove the chlorine taste as well as the protozoa and, hopefully, any other chemicals present, too.
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