Then, I figured heck, I might as well be filtering this water right? I mean, filtered water sounds like a good idea. So I got the cheapest Brita pitcher I could - the skinny one pictured here.
Two major problems with this pitcher. Well, three actually.
- It's big. That's kinda the point, but it's really wider than it needs to be.
- The spout is terribly designed. Because of how high the pitcher's spout is, there's about an inch of water at the bottom that will never come out. That means more fill-ups, and less effective storage capacity.
- The thing leaks. On the list of things that a water pitcher is supposed to do, holding water is pretty high on the list. And this pitcher fails at it. I would have taken it back, but from the Amazon reviews, it's clear that it's a common problem.
- It was a larger capacity than the Brita filter (23 cup vs 18 cup)
- It was skinnier than the Brita filter (I know, the physics astounds)
- It included a real-life water tester!
That's right, a water tester! How cool is that? So I could objectively say, this is what the water was before, and this is what it is now. Plus Molly had some 20% off coupons, so I was sold.
As it turns out, tap water in Grand Ledge is pretty hard. The packaging of this filter was describing various values of TDS (total dissolved solids). It listed anything over 200 as "hard water". The tap water here clocked in at about 450. Yeah, that's definitively hard. Putting water into the pitcher didn't get it all the way to zero, but after filtering the tester read "002". I'll take that.
But here's the thing - all over the packaging, it kept saying in very big letters, "DON'T USE THE FILTER WHEN THE READING IS PAST 006". Which I thought was weird...I'm thinking, heck, let's use this thing till it gets to like 100. In any case, I didn't believe the hype about filter changing.
Until yesterday. We got this pitcher about three weeks ago, and yesterday I discovered that the smell of bad cat breath wasn't actually the cat, but it was the water from the pitcher. Yeah, it was gross. Seriously like cat food. Not cool.
Filters aren't especially cheap, clocking in at ~$15 each, and with as bad as the water is here, filter life is especially short. Under ideal conditions, the ZeroWater site says the filter should last 40 gallons - here in the Ledge, it's rated to last from 8-15 gallons. I don't have any idea how much water we put through there, but I can tell you that it is not worthwhile to push the limit.
Oh, and the reading on the water meter? 018. Well past 006 for sure, but for sure not what I expected to happen.
Moral of the story...the ZeroWater pitcher is for real. Its shape is awesome (just barely short enough to fit in the fridge, but that's perfect!). Holds a lot of water. Filters the heck out of the water. Assuming your filter is good, it tastes great. Doesn't leak. Has a water tester included, which is ridiculously cool. But, the bad news is quite significant - be prepared to pay a ton for filters, and be prepared to smell bad cat breath as your warning to change the filter. I'm not sure what the science is there that causes that, but it's decidedly not awesome.
Now you know.




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