theowlman16
Well-Known Member
Anyone patient enough to do a 10 gallon batch with water from the fridge dispenser. It might be my best (cheapest) option for quality brewing water.
If your tap water is crappy, filtering really won't make it much better.
The typical charcoal filters can remove most of the chlorine and some of the bad taste if trickled through slowly enough. It won't remove minerals, iron, manganese, etc. Chlorine and chloramines (added by your municipality for sanitation) can be easily removed with 1/4 Campden tablet per 5 gallons of water.
To filter everything, buy an RO setup (~$200) or buy RO water from your supermarket/Walmart. Those will give you 99.99% pure water, with very low mineral content.
Anyone patient enough to do a 10 gallon batch with water from the fridge dispenser. It might be my best (cheapest) option for quality brewing water.
So, just to ask those of you that bought RO systems - At $350 for a good system, I don't brew enough to make it pay off for at least 10 years. If I remember you need to brew on an almost weekly basis for it to pay for itself in any reasonable amount of time. That being said, was it just a convenience factor for those that have bought one? Or was it more than that?
So, naive question: If one were to buy RO water from the aforementioned walmart/grocers market is it bottled and stocked on shelves or do you ask a clerk to bottle it for you? Also, what makes this better than buying bottled drinking water like I usually do?
So, naive question: If one were to buy RO water from the aforementioned walmart/grocers market is it bottled and stocked on shelves or do you ask a clerk to bottle it for you? Also, what makes this better than buying bottled drinking water like I usually do?
I've seen 1-2 gallon an hour RO units for quite a bit under $200. These things have come way down (Amazon, NewEgg). For brewing, you'll need to start collecting water the day before to get your volume. You may want to use that water for cooking and drinking too, if your tap water is crappy. [...]