Posted by Steve on April 15, 2009, 11:56 am
If the municipal water supply is ok, why use a water filter in the
fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?
Thanks!
--
It was a book to kill time for those who like it better dead.
...Dame Rose Macaulay
Posted by JR Weiss on April 15, 2009, 2:27 pm
> If the municipal water supply is ok, why use a water filter in the
> fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
> would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
> Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?
If you usually drink water from the tap, there's little reason to put a filter
on the refrigerator line. The exception might be if there's sediment in the
water that doesn't bother you normally, but might settle in the smaller hoses in
the fridge and eventually clog them. Also, some people prefer a charcoal filter
on the water that they use for ice cubes.
If the filter is on the line going into the fridge, the icemaker will also be
filtered.
Posted by Steve on April 15, 2009, 5:51 pm
>> If the municipal water supply is ok, why use a water filter in the
>> fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
>> would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
>> Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?
>If you usually drink water from the tap, there's little reason to put a filter
>on the refrigerator line. The exception might be if there's sediment in the
>water that doesn't bother you normally, but might settle in the smaller hoses
in
>the fridge and eventually clog them. Also, some people prefer a charcoal
filter
>on the water that they use for ice cubes.
>If the filter is on the line going into the fridge, the icemaker will also be
>filtered.
Thanks JR. The filter is a PuriClean II, it's part of the fridge,
located at the top of the food compartment.
--
For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life,
please press three.
...Alice Kahn
Posted by John A. Weeks III on April 15, 2009, 9:50 pm
> If the municipal water supply is ok, why use a water filter in the
> fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
> would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
>
> Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?
>
> Thanks!
You want a water filter in you refrigerator because you want to
filter the water that comes into your house. Water pipes can
have all kinds sediment in it. Scale from older pipes can get
into your water. Water in some locations has stuff like iron
and calcium in it. The second reason is for taste. A good
carbon filter can clean up the off taste that many city water
supplies have, and cover up the chemicals.
Yes, the filter takes care of the icemaker. Yes, a non-working
filter can be dangerous. A filter can block benzene from
passing, and if that filter would to break due to pressure
building up from being full of debris, you can get a slug of
benzene and really do some damage. That is what happened to
Perrier when they had their recall.
An even better solution is to get a reverse osmosis system
for under your sink, and then a 3 stage filter. This way, you
get rid of much of the bad stuff, and you have water at the
sink that is filtered. Using larger filters under your sink
means that they last longer, and you don't needlessly use
your expensive filters in the refrigerator. You may also
want a U/V filter to kill off any biologicals that come down
the water line. People die every year across the US from
biologicals in the water.
Even if you have a bigger filter under the sink, you still want
to keep a filter in your refrigerator. That becomes a polishing
filter that the final job on your water, resulting in good tasting
and very clean water. If your ice cubes are not clear, remember
that the junk that keeps your ice from being clear ends up in
your body if you don't filter it out.
-john-
--
======================================================================
John A. Weeks III 612-720-2854 john@johnweeks.com
Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com
======================================================================
Posted by Steve on April 16, 2009, 1:04 am
Thanks John, appreciate the info.
>> If the municipal water supply is ok, why use a water filter in the
>> fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
>> would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
>> Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?
>You want a water filter in you refrigerator because you want to
>filter the water that comes into your house. Water pipes can
>have all kinds sediment in it. Scale from older pipes can get
>into your water. Water in some locations has stuff like iron
>and calcium in it. The second reason is for taste. A good
>carbon filter can clean up the off taste that many city water
>supplies have, and cover up the chemicals.
>Yes, the filter takes care of the icemaker. Yes, a non-working
>filter can be dangerous. A filter can block benzene from
>passing, and if that filter would to break due to pressure
>building up from being full of debris, you can get a slug of
>benzene and really do some damage. That is what happened to
>Perrier when they had their recall.
>An even better solution is to get a reverse osmosis system
>for under your sink, and then a 3 stage filter. This way, you
>get rid of much of the bad stuff, and you have water at the
>sink that is filtered. Using larger filters under your sink
>means that they last longer, and you don't needlessly use
>your expensive filters in the refrigerator. You may also
>want a U/V filter to kill off any biologicals that come down
>the water line. People die every year across the US from
>biologicals in the water.
>Even if you have a bigger filter under the sink, you still want
>to keep a filter in your refrigerator. That becomes a polishing
>filter that the final job on your water, resulting in good tasting
>and very clean water. If your ice cubes are not clear, remember
>that the junk that keeps your ice from being clear ends up in
>your body if you don't filter it out.
>-john-
--
For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life,
please press three.
...Alice Kahn
> fridge? It's just guesswork to figure out how often to change it -
> would water from a non-working filter be worse than unfiltered water?
> Also, does it filter the water going into the icemaker?