Posts Tagged ‘Filters’

Using Water Filters with Your Bidet Toilet Seat

Using Water Filters with Your Bidet Toilet Seat

There are two main benefits for using a water filter with your bidet seat:  (1) it’s better to use filtered water when cleaning your sensitive parts and, (2) it keeps the internal parts of your bidet seat free of sediment and impurities found in normal tap water.

Your bidet toilet seat works with a series of hoses, water reservoirs, and other parts where water runs through.  For example, your bidet routes water from the tap and through the internal water heating system, then out the spray outlet found at the tip of the wash nozzle.  It’s important to keep this system clean and free of mineral build-up, and a bidet water filter helps achieve that.  A good comparison would be to look through an old pipe when a building is re-doing their plumbing.  Mineral build-up can be seen all over the inside walls of the pipe, and you wouldn’t want the insides of your toilet bidet seat looking like that!

It goes without saying that there are definitely benefits of using clean, filtered water to clean yourself, particularly your private area.  You wouldn’t want to expose one of the most sensitive parts of your body to particulates or bacteria.  And when considering how easy and inexpensive these water filters are to install, there really isn’t a good reason to go without them.

Two types of bidet water filters are generally available, carbon filters and iodine filters.  Carbon filters work because of a chemical process called adsorption.  This is when the atomic charge of carbon frees particles and contaminants from their bond with water.  As water passes thru the carbon filter, these particles chemically attach to the carbon, leaving clean filtered water to pass through.

Then there is the iodine filter.  This type of filter works by adding a very small amount of iodine to the water as it passes thru the filter.  This process sterilizes the water.  Iodine is a common household item which is frequently used to treat scrapes and cuts.  Iodine works for this purpose because it’s actually an antiseptic which kills bacteria.  This concept is similar to how iodine water filters work for your bidet toilet seat.

Installing a bidet water filter takes just minutes.  There’s a water outlet behind your toilet, which is connected to your bidet seat through a hose.  This is the hose that supplies tap water to your bidet seat.  Bidet water filters are designed to be attached to this hose, as they have one male end and one female end.  To install, close the water shut-off on your water outlet.  Then unscrew the hose which connects to the water outlet, and attach the female end of the water filter directly on to the outlet.  Re-attach the hose to the other (male) end of the filter.  Open the water-shut off valve, and then look around the area of your toilet bidet seat to ensure there are no leaks.

It’s recommended that you replace your bidet water filter every four to six months.

Jensen Lee is the founder of bidetsPLUS,  specializing in the modern electronic bidet toilet seat.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Walker Geist - May 12, 2012 at 12:28 am

Categories: Build A Water Filter   Tags: , , , , ,

Consider Drinking Water Filters: What’s in Your Water May Shock You!

Consider Drinking Water Filters: What’s in Your Water May Shock You!

If you’re like the many other consumers not using drinking water filters, you’re in bad company, and here’s why. Go down the isle at just about any grocery store in America that carries beverages, and the most popular item that you will find on the shelf is water. Why is that? One, it sells like crazy, and two, those who don’t use drinking water filters have lousy tasting water. However, there should be another reason to consider using a water filter, your health!

 

Many people do not know what is in their tap water, and there in lies the shock. A few of the ingredients in your tap water include bacteria, viruses, uranium, radium, nitrate, arsenic, chromium and fluoride. One of the most prominent ingredients in tap water is dissolved toilet tissue. Doesn’t sound very appetizing does it?

 

Where does this contamination come from? Some of it actually comes from natural sources such as rock formations that find their way into our water supply. Some chemicals such as chlorine are actually placed into our water supply on purpose to kill off harmful bacteria. The problem is, chlorine can be very harmful to the human body and has been linked to certain cancers. This is why many people have turned to using a drinking water filter.

 

Other sources of water contamination include not getting rid of everyday items in your house such as cleaning solvents, paint, and motor oil in a proper manner. Then you have problem of industrial waste. Seems like everyday you read about some kind of accidental leakage or a large company using illegal methods to get rid of its waste. Pesticides are also another item that has found its way into our water supply.

 

Our local water treatment plants do try to do a good job in making sure our water is safe, but it’s next to impossible to get rid of all the contaminants. We are also faced with a dwindling supply of fresh pure water, so many cities have turned to using reclaimed water. Reclaimed water includes the waste that is flushed down your toilet, and then is chemically treated and used in our drinking water supply. You should consider using a drinking water filter if you live in an area where reclaimed water is being used.

 

Many people would like to use a drinking water filter, but don’t know where to start. There are many types and brands available. They most expensive is not always best. Same goes for the cheapest. Some drinking water filters are cheap and do a fair job, but they need replacement cartridges often, which can end up being more expensive in the long run than higher priced drinking water filters.

 

Some higher priced filters do a poor job but carry a high price tag just to make a profit for the promoter. Doing a little research when choosing a drinking water filter will not only improve your health, but will save you money in the longer term.

Author Steve Waters has done extensive research on drinking water filters to save you time and money.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Walker Geist - April 28, 2012 at 11:50 am

Categories: Drinking Water   Tags: , , ,

Drinking Water – Fridge Freezer Water Filters Part 1

Drinking Water – Fridge Freezer Water Filters Part 1

Using American Style Fridge Freezer Water Filters is one way of providing a fresh and clean supply of water for all your day to day water intake needs.

Water and Water Filters.
Some chemically sensitive people find they are sensitive to water that they ingest in their daily lives, due to minute traces of chemicals and metals. For some people, it is reasonable enough to take care with water that they use for drinking and cooking. Other people, if they are highly sensitive, are affected by washing with, or touching tap water, some even by breathing in steam or vapours from standing or running water – a flushing lavatory, for instance. Intolerance of this nature is rare, however, and for most people, it will be sufficient to avoid drinking the water that upsets them.

What Causes Reactions to Tap water?
Low levels of chemicals known to cause chemical intolerance are found in potable, as well as metals known or suspected of causing harm.
Water quality regulations permit levels of chemicals which may not be Hazardous to your health. Chemically sensitive people are, however, affected by very low levels of chemicals, and particles present in tap water are often sufficient to cause them reactions.

The contents of tap water vary quite considerably across the country, and even within the locality of water companies. This is partly because the level of industrial or agricultural contaminants leeching into the surrounding countryside and finding their way into the local water table. It is also because of the age and quality of water treatment plants and their associated pipe networks. You might happen to live in an area with relatively new water treatment plants and pipe networks, or with little or no industry, or with a farming community with low fertiliser usage, then your tap water will contain lower levels of contaminants than that of other places.
Of course your water supply may come from groundwater drawn direct from springs and or boreholes. If this is the case then little or no filtration would be required.

Water that is drawn from rivers is subject to more pollution and needs greater sanitization, especially water from lowland rivers and reservoirs. The chemicals found in tap water which are predominantly associated with chemical sensitivity are:  chlorine, nitrates, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, trihalomethanes, and organic solvents.

Aluminium, found naturally or added to purify water in some areas, is linked to some health problems and in the case of the older buildings, lead can be found sometimes in water pipes within the home and is known to be a health hazard.
Traces of other heavy metals are also found in drinking water – metals such as zinc. Metals like zinc do not cause specific sensitivity reactions, but it is thought that digesting them can depress the immune system, diminish vitamin, and thereby reduce your capability to withstand the chemical excesses.
Finding the right Water Filter for your needs is critical to your well being. Recent resource for all your Water Filter needs.

While we all strive for healthier life and living it is a comfort to know we can rely on a good resource of Water Filter information.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Walker Geist - April 20, 2012 at 7:46 pm

Categories: Water Filters   Tags: , , , ,

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