Thank you for posting about this! Clean water makes such a difference in life and health. You have worked through the high points. I plan to buy a new filter system hopefully for a black Friday sale price.
Every tip, detail & link is in this Scorecard: bit.ly/4e591AM 💜 I will keep you updated! Also, excuse any little typo in this video. Everything sort of died in the middle, but this was too important NOT to publish! Keep me posted on your go-to water filter system. Thanks for watching!
Great video! Have you heard of Aarke? 100% stainless steel. No plastic touches the water, not even on the filter. Does plastic on the filter of the DBB sit in the water?
I’ve seen Aarke! The water in the bottom chamber, when full, doesn’t hit the bottom of my filters or washers used when tightening them into the chamber. Top chamber elements are submerged in water. But that water then goes through the filter.
Aarke is a water conditioner for 30 gallons and doesn't filter the water. They use GAC to absorb containing, DBB elements use a refined GAC and carbon block internally that does this as well as filtering and is NSF tested to over 800 gallons for std 42, and 400 gallons for std 53.
Per DBB “According to tests done by EPA-accredited labs, Berkefeld Filters remove over 99.9% of PFAS, including PFOA and PFOS, from the water along with other types of PFAS.” tidd.ly/4eXtpoA
Yes, the Ultra Sterasyl does and has testing over 800 gallons that proves this. The Ultra Fluoride is in testing and will have the pass testing results very soon.
An RO is a mains plug-in in-line filter, British Berkefeld by Doulton is a gravity filter. RO's extract the H2O from the water so all of the healthy minerals are left in the effluent. An RO will waste up to 75% of the water that goes into them so it is very expensive in the long run. They are very useful in certain areas of the world but the US in not one of them.
Very impressed with the review, thank you Britt. It was nice finding this and a great presentation.
Thank you for posting about this! Clean water makes such a difference in life and health. You have worked through the high points. I plan to buy a new filter system hopefully for a black Friday sale price.
You’re welcome! It’s a game changer for sure 💜
Thanks for your review
Every tip, detail & link is in this Scorecard: bit.ly/4e591AM 💜
I will keep you updated! Also, excuse any little typo in this video. Everything sort of died in the middle, but this was too important NOT to publish!
Keep me posted on your go-to water filter system. Thanks for watching!
Great video! Have you heard of Aarke? 100% stainless steel. No plastic touches the water, not even on the filter. Does plastic on the filter of the DBB sit in the water?
I’ve seen Aarke! The water in the bottom chamber, when full, doesn’t hit the bottom of my filters or washers used when tightening them into the chamber. Top chamber elements are submerged in water. But that water then goes through the filter.
Aarke is a water conditioner for 30 gallons and doesn't filter the water. They use GAC to absorb containing, DBB elements use a refined GAC and carbon block internally that does this as well as filtering and is NSF tested to over 800 gallons for std 42, and 400 gallons for std 53.
Does it remove forever chemicals
Per DBB “According to tests done by EPA-accredited labs, Berkefeld Filters remove over 99.9% of PFAS, including PFOA and PFOS, from the water along with other types of PFAS.” tidd.ly/4eXtpoA
Yes, the Ultra Sterasyl does and has testing over 800 gallons that proves this. The Ultra Fluoride is in testing and will have the pass testing results very soon.
Hi Britt - I sent you an email. Great video!
Reverse osmosis removes everything so why not pick that
I’ll explore reverse osmosis next probably, but for now the gravity filters better fit my current needs/home!
An RO is a mains plug-in in-line filter, British Berkefeld by Doulton is a gravity filter. RO's extract the H2O from the water so all of the healthy minerals are left in the effluent. An RO will waste up to 75% of the water that goes into them so it is very expensive in the long run. They are very useful in certain areas of the world but the US in not one of them.