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How To Filter Water at Home

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13 views8 pages

How To Filter Water at Home

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Capture Gopro
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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www.healthline.

com

How to Filter Water at Home: Tips, Safety, and Instructions

9 – 12 minutes

A good way to ensure you’re drinking clean water is by filtering it.

While you can purchase bottled water that a company has already filtered, you can also filter water
yourself. The method you choose to do this — and there are several — will likely depend on your:

Water quality goals

Budget

Desired level of effort

This article focuses on do-it-yourself (DIY) water filtration methods, which you can use whether you’re at
home, traveling, or in nature.

The best water filtration method for you will depend on your environment, your budget, and how much
effort you want to invest.

You can purchase relatively small home water filters at many hardware and homeware stores. Many of
them are canister-style filters that couple directly with your kitchen faucet.

Some offer a variety of filtration cartridges to choose from, depending on your filtering needs.

You can also use a number of DIY methods to filter, disinfect, and purify water yourself. They may come
in handy, especially when traditional systems aren’t an option.

Below are some common DIY water filtering methods you can use.

Boiling
Heating water at a rolling boil for 1 minute makes it safe to drink. Boil it for 3 minutes if you’re at an
elevation above 6,500 feet (1,981 meters).

In the event of a local boil water advisory, experts recommend people boil their water to prevent
infectious diseases (1Trusted Source, 2Trusted Source).

Tablets or drops

Some common water purification or disinfecting tablets and drops include:

Sodium dichloroisocyanurate

Chlorine dioxide

Iodine

Tetraglycine hydroperiodide

To use, follow the instructions on the package and drop the tablets into the water to purify it, letting
them sit for a directed period of time.

UV treatment

In this approach, you allow ultraviolet sunlight to shine through the water. This damages the DNA of
harmful germs, disinfecting the water by removing bacteria, viruses, and other microorganisms.

Adding lime juice can help speed up the solar treatment process (3Trusted Source).

Activated charcoal

Activated charcoal can take up and store toxic compounds, smell, and germs. It can also reduce fluoride
and heavy metals.

However, it doesn’t appear to be very effective at removing bacteria, viruses, or hard water minerals
(4Trusted Source, 5, 6).
To use it, simply put the charcoal in a sock or cloth bag and pour water through.

Travel-size sediment filters

These store-bought filters are designed to remove germs and bacteria from natural water. Companies
may design them to use once or multiple times.

They come in the following forms:

A hand-pump machine

A filtering straw or water bottle

Squeezable pouch filters

A filtering water pitcher

DIY portable sediment filters

You can create your own water filter to remove smell and debris by layering a mix of gravel, play sand,
and activated carbon in a bucket drilled with a hole and fit with plumbing to pour water through.

Fruit peel filters

People sometimes use fruit peels, such as apple peels, for water purification in remote villages that rely
on contaminated water for everyday needs.

You could potentially adapt this method into a DIY water filtration system. However, this may not be a
good idea until scientists have done more research on the safety and effectiveness of this method for
DIY use (7Trusted Source).

Summary

When traditional water filtration methods are unavailable, you have plenty of other options, such as
boiling, UV treatment, disinfectant tablets, portable sediment filters, and activated charcoal.
You may be interested in filtering your water for many reasons.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sets certain standards for tap water in homes throughout
the United States. However, these may not be enough to align with your water quality goals.

For example, the maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG) for arsenic, a known human carcinogen, is
0.0 mg/L. However, the maximum amount the EPA allows in tap water is 0.01 mg/L (8Trusted Source,
9Trusted Source).

The MCLG is the highest amount of a contaminant allowed in tap water before there is concern for
adverse health effects. This means it’s possible people could experience harmful effects from arsenic by
drinking tap water that adheres to EPA water quality standards.

Furthermore, though EPA regulates approximately 90 contaminants in tap water, there are many more
it doesn’t regulate (10, 11Trusted Source).

Some people are also concerned that they can’t know or control what may happen to their drinking
water between the time it leaves the treatment facility and pours into their glass, or how their
municipality functions.

In the Flint, Michigan, water crisis, the city failed to treat the water after changes in water source. As a
result, lead leached into the city water from pipes and the contaminated water reached people’s homes
(12Trusted Source, 13Trusted Source).

Lead has negative impact on the brain development of children, among other harmful effects (12Trusted
Source, 13Trusted Source).

For indoor water use, it may be a good idea to keep a stock of filtered water available in case of
emergency water shutoffs or other events that result in a lack of clean drinking water. Having a water
filter at home may come in handy, too.

For outdoor activities, like camping and backpacking, consider bringing a method to filter water. This will
help you avoid consuming harmful germs or other contaminants in natural water, which may result from
wild animals or other human traffic.
Filtering water can not only remove contaminants and debris, it can also make your water taste better.
Additionally, it can be a more eco-friendly way to enjoy clean water because it helps you cut down on
single-use plastic bottles.

Summary

Water filtration may further improve some aspects of tap water. It can also be helpful in water shutoff
situations or scenarios when clean drinking water isn’t readily available, like in remote locations.

The benefits of filtering your water depend on the effectiveness of your chosen method and the reason
you’re using it.

For example, certain types of filtering methods can do the following:

Improve taste and smell

Remove chemical contaminants

Remove germs and harmful pathogens

Remove heavy metals

Remove physical debris or particles

While you can try several DIY water filtering methods, their effectiveness varies. Not all of them will
have the same result and most can’t provide all these types of filtration.

Boiling water and UV treatment, as well as iodine, chlorine, and other disinfectant tablets, can remove
certain bacteria.

However, they can’t remove:

Chlorine

Heavy metals like lead


Chemical contaminants like pesticides

They also can’t filter out physical debris.

Furthermore, iodine and chlorine tablets don’t kill the parasites Giardia or Cryptosporidium, whereas UV
treatment does (14Trusted Source).

Activated charcoal can take up impurities, certain heavy metals, and organic contaminants like
pesticides, but it isn’t very effective at removing germs.

Physical filters, whether store-bought and portable or homemade from layers of sediment, are your best
bet for removing debris from water.

The best methods to improve water’s smell, taste, or appearance are activated charcoal and physical
filters.

If you choose to purchase a water filter from the store, a good way to ensure effectiveness is to find one
with a seal indicating that a third party has tested it against a public health standard.

One example is the NSF/ANSI 53 standard, which certifies that a water filter is effective at reducing
specific health-related contaminants (15Trusted Source).

To determine the effectiveness of a DIY water filter, you’d need to use a water test kit. This can give you
information about the presence of certain heavy metals, pesticides, and bacteria in the water.

Summary

DIY filters of different types are effective at different aspects of filtration. Some are best for removing
particles, while others target harmful germs and contaminants.

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Whatever filtering method you choose, there are a couple things to keep in mind for the best
experience.

Determine the most appropriate filtering method for your needs. For instance, for longer treks in the
wilderness, it may make more sense to purchase a travel filter you can use multiple times instead of
relying on a DIY filter.

What’s more, you can combine two methods of water filtration. For example, you could use a DIY water
filter or sieve, then use boiling, activated charcoal, or UV treatment as a second step.

This would help remove both physical debris and microscopic contaminants.

Summary

To get the best results with a DIY filter, make sure you choose the most appropriate filter or filters for
your goals. This may mean combining more than one type to best tackle both physical and chemical
water issues.

While you can purchase prefiltered water or use a store-bought filtration system to improve water
quality, you can also try several DIY methods of filtering water.

To find the best approach, consider your goals. Certain methods work best for removing physical debris
and particles, whereas others are better for removing heavy metals and germs or improving smell and
taste.
You can also combine different methods or use a commercial travel filter.

You can use DIY water filtration at home, for travel, or in nature. While it can take a little creativity and
effort, you can improve the quality and aesthetic of your water even if you don’t have a traditional
filtering option available.

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