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Posted by car crash on November 22, 2006, 10:35 am
By all kinds of tests, I mean lab tests. All came back negative. No
one can recognize the smell but the concensus is that its an organic
smell. The water company offered to install a $500 large block carbon
filter. Is that decent price?
On Nov 22, 9:44 am, aenewho...@gmail.com wrote:
> car crash wrote:
> > We have a strong smell in hot and cold water. All kinds of tests
> > can't identify the smell. Someone suggested a carbon filter will help.
> > Does anyone know anything about carbon filters and could help me of
> > whether they are a good product to have or not ? Do they build up alot
> > of germs in the filter?
> > Thanks.I'm curious about your "all kinds of tests" - have you acutally had
> this tested by a lab, or by 'tests', do you mean you've held it up next
> to gasoline and decided it doesn't smell like that?
> A carbon filter would probably help, but not guaranteed - if your
> problem is some organic compound, carbon should definitely help. I
> don't think there are any drawbacks to carbon filters, as long as you
> change them roughly to keep up with the manufacturer's recommendations.
> We have a carbon filter mounted on our kitchen sink, and though it
> says to change every 3 months, we sometimes get 4, but it's starting to
> get scummy and slows down at that point and I wouldn't want to go any
> longer. Our water is pretty good to begin with, but it helps some with
> taste and makes my wife feel better by reducing tasteless pollutants
> like atrazine.
> As far as "germs", some bacteria and/or fungi can eventually start to
> grow on the filter, but as long as you change the filter semi-regularly
> (depends on size of filter), you should definitely be filtering out
> more than you're adding.
> One quick test you could do is to get or borrow a Brita-type pitcher
> filter - that's just a small carbon filter. If that helps, you could
> keep it, move up to a faucet-mount, an under-sink mount, or a
> whole-house filter if you want to filter shower water too. If you do a
> lot of lawn watering, you might want to check into a bypass valve, or
> installing the filter after the hose spigots, so you're not wasting
> your filtered water on your lawn.
> Good luck,
> Andy
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