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How do I save money on filtered water?!

Discussion in 'Equipment/Sanitation' started by Chris7687, Mar 8, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    Chris7687

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    Hey guys,
    So I have been brewing for about 2 months now and after 5 batches of extract I have switched to AG. One of the best things I like about AG is the price! I'm making a American Amber Ale tonight and everything cost me $18 for a 6 gallon batch! That is until I need to get the water. I live in Tampa and our tap water isn't to hard but I can taste the chemicals and chlorine in it, so I refuse to use this in my beer. I was curious to know what routes people have gone to save money on water, as opposed to spending $2 for 2.5 gallons every time and needing 8.5 gallons (at least) per batch. That's an extra $6-7 a batch x 4-5 batches a month x 12 months a yr! Rather spend that $300 on something else (like a shotgun!). I am renting right now, but plan to stay in the area for atleast 2-3 more years so I am open to a easy, permanent fixture. So let the idea's flow guys. Thanks.

    PS - I have a large Brita Crafe, would this be fine for small extra ammounts of water? Maybe 2 gallons? Seem like a lot to fill up 8-9 gallons with this thing
     
  2. #2
    Monster Mash

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
  3. #3
    Chris7687

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    Do I install this under the sink? Would this eliminate the chlorine and any other chemicals/bacteria that would produce off flavors? I ask about bacteria just incase I need to top off the wort if it comes out to low.
     
  4. #4
    kingmatt

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    My tap water here in PA also has chloramine added and give a bit of a medicinal flavor to the water; I just crush up a campden tablet and about half of it to my brew water and it has worked great...no off flavors from the water in my beer. The bottle of campden tablets will last me years and cost under $5.
     
  5. #5
    Rapt0rBrown

    Active Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    I may be in a small minority, but i found a natural spring near my home and since changing my beer has great.
     
  6. #6
    dfess1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    i use a house filter, in line from my hose to my HLT/MLT for filling. Works pretty good. Pieced it together at Lowes. After two brews, it paid for itself in what I was paying at the grocery store for "spring water".
     
  7. #7
    GulfCoastGirl

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    I live in NW Florida on the coast and our water here is really high in salt due to leaching from the Gulf.... living on the water is great... this is just one downside.


    My Walmart has a Culligan machine and I bought some 3 and 5 gallon bottles that I take in when I grocery shop and fill em up at the Culligan machine. They charge .27 cents per gallon.

    Don't waste money buying the gallon jugs of water they charge $1 for.... spend the money upfront on some of the refillable 5 gallon bottles and fill them up at the water machine. Your local Walmart should have this machine.


    Or you could get a RO machine to remove salts from the water.... but the cheaper ones are slow and waste a lot of water. I have one but I stopped using it after I flooded a bathroom twice by forgetting about the jug filling up
     
  8. #8
    kingmatt

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2012
    My fiance's dad has a condo on Navarre Beach that we use a few times a year, I LOVE the Emerald Coast!
     
  9. #9
    Calichusetts

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    THIS!

    There are so many natural springs around you just need to find them...get a local hiking guide or talk to your environmental services...there was a great spring in my town I never knew about for almost 20 years. Its right along a side road and easy to load containers into my car, completely safe! The name brand bottled spring water companies are doing the same thing, they just show you fancy commercials of isolated and heavenly looking sites, but its the same thing. I've been to a few of the towns and places in Maine that Poland Springs gets it water and believe me, if you saw the sites, it would change your mind on how pure and isolated these springs are. I'm not saying that bottled water isn't worth it, but its a fantastic study of marketing.

    You could also put your water in the bottom of shopping cart when you food shop and "forget" to pay for it...but we would never do that now...would we
    :drunk:
     
  10. #10
    Golddiggie

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    You could use one of these undersink filter setups... I actually have one under my kitchen sink and it does a great job of filtering my drinking, brewing, cooking water. You could try the filter setup from the DIY BYO issue, but I suspect that you need to filter out more than a single, small, filter can handle.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Oct 23, 2018
  11. #11
    shelly_belly

    Someday After A While

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
  12. #12
    Chris7687

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    shelly belly - does that hook up to your hose on the outside of your house? Granted it would just be for water pre-boil, aren't you worried about the critters (both microbial and reptilian) that live in your hose outside? Don't want lizard and frog leg beer.
     
  13. #13
    SwampassJ

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    Go to publix and buy a 5 gallon jug or two. Next brew day take the empty jugs to a public with a reverse Osmosis machine and file it for 1.75 per 5 gallons.
     
  14. #14
    jtejedor

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    This is the way to go. Using RO water is a good way to have a clean slate so to speak with which to build water depending on the style your brewing. I have a few better bottles for fermenting so I just fill those up the night before brew day for about $1.50 for 5 gallons. If your tap water is not that hard campden tablets and a carbon filter should pretty much take care of it.
     
  15. #15
    flananuts

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    My suggestion would be to get your water tested so you know what you have to work with. Turns out my water is perfect base water to brew with. So I just run it through a carbon whole house filter and then I build my water profile based on the brewing style.
     
  16. #16
    SwampassJ

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    He's in Tampa . I think drinking water from the pool would taste better. Only city where the water tastes worse than my city water tastes.
     
  17. #17
    cbar

    Member

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    This. RO water is great. I have an RO system in my house, but I still go to the store and re-fill 5 gallon jugs because the system in my house only has a 3 gallon tank (I think), and the filters are expensive.
     
  18. #18
    shelly_belly

    Someday After A While

    Posted Mar 9, 2012
    Yes, it has garden hose fittings. I install it on brew day. At the end of the session, I drain it, dry it and seal it up until the next brewday.
     
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