Pooker wrote:
Speaking of water filters and ice makers: My old fridge had an ice maker and I lived alone so I didn't use a lot of ice. Periodically I would have a flood because the tube would freeze up or too much debris from our water would plug it. I hated that ice thing. So when I replaced the fridge I hunted all over for one that didn't come with an ice maker! They ALL pretty much get installed automatically, but the advertised price posted on the appliance doesn't include the cost of the ice maker - so that's added on along with the other taxes and fees. Made me mad that everywhere I went I would have to pay extra for something I didn't even want in the first place! Finally found one I loved and it didn't have the ice maker.
Now as for water filters. Our water here is terrible out of the tap. The whole city seems to buy bottled water and/or filters their incoming water. But there is so much "junk" in our water that water lines, faucets, etc. get all corroded and I've replaces every faucet in the house, some twice. I have two faucet filters for our drinking water. A Brita and a Pur. Both are doing the same thing. The filtered stream is small and slow. Not as bad when I first put in a refill, but within days the stream is barely running. Takes forever to fill the coffeepot. We have tried back flushing them, blowing them out, cleaning the little screens inside, etc. It almost seems like the carbon (or whatever it is) in the filter clumps together and reduces the stream! I can't see replacing these expensive filters every few weeks, but the larger filters for larger systems would be even more expensive to replace. Years ago we had an under sink filter system and that worked quite well, but that was before I moved to this different water provider. I do get both the gallon bottles of water and the individual ones, but it would be impossible to use bottled water all the time. First, I can barely lift the gallon ones, I could never get the larger bottles. Second, I have very little counter space to put even a 2-gal jug with spout. Keeping bottled water outside in a shed when it's consistently over 100* which we have to do, doesn't seem smart either, but we're doing that.
Sorry to write a book, but do any of you have this problem? Anyone have a good solution? Is there another brand besides Brita and Pur? I haven't seen one and I hate to buy yet another filter that only lasts a couple of weeks!
Evie
Good morning, Evie & all.
I have many of the same thoughts as you do. When I needed to replace my 25-year-old refrigerator (it died) at the height of the pandemic in 2020, I had a heck of a time finding a small-ish fridge without the icemaker thing. Although I do use some ice, just the plastic ice trays inside the freezer make enough ice for me.
As for water. . . don't get me started. Where I lived in the Sierra foothills for 30 years the water right out of the tap (and it was "city" water) was heavenly. When I moved to the valley the taste of the water was a rude shock - almost undrinkable (after doing some research, I found that the tap water here comes partly from the Feather River, and partly from city owned/managed local wells). Yuck.
After about a year of filling/refilling gallon jugs at the local grocery store, I decided to try this Pur water dispenser (I keep it in my fridge):
https://www.walmart.com/ip/PUR-30-Cup-Dispenser-Filtration-System-Blue-White-DS1800Z/358108111?athbdg=L1200It holds about a gallon-and-a-half of water, has worked very well for me, produces lovely tasting water, and is quite durable (LOL - mostly!): The first one lasted for several years, until I dropped it (it just slipped out of my hands) right after filling it. It smashed into several large plastic pieces on the floor, with water everywhere.
I had been so happy with it, that I just bought another. The new one (now about a year old - I do replace the inexpensive filters on it every month or so) seems to work just as well as the first one did. It seems to fill the reservoir fairly quickly.
Anne