Real Estate House

Ways To Filter House Water

Published at 02/15/2012 19:48:40

Introduction

Many households across the country receive water from a local treatment center, while others may rely on personal water wells beneath or near the home's property. People have a reasonable amount of trust in the water that gets delivered to the home, but many are also concerned about pollutants and toxins, which are either overlooked or out of the control of water treatment facilities to properly remove from the water supply.

In response, people want to find ways filter house water as it reaches the home, since there is not much that can be done at the water treatment facility or with the groundwater supply that feeds area wells. However, homeowners can become daunted by the responsibility of trying to filter house water on their own, without professional help from the experts at water facilities. Luckily, many of the consumer, off-the-shelf options that help to filter house water include detailed instructions and other forms of support. You just have discover which options suit your needs to adequately filter house water.

Step 1

Obtain a counter-top water pitcher to filter house water that comes from the kitchen sink. When you turn on the faucet and place the container under the tap, the running water flows through carbon or another type of filtering material, removing pollutants, as well as smells and odors. In some cases, water pitchers can improve the color and taste of the water.

Step 2

Use the filtering mechanism for your refrigerator's water dispenser, and change it regularly. Many modern household refrigerators come with water dispensers as well as ice makers, and manufacturers include the ability to filter house water before it is frozen and dispensed as ice cubes, or as liquid water. Read your refrigerator's instruction manual to determine if it has a filter.

Step 3

Obtain an in-line water filter for the refrigerator, if the manufacturer did not build one into the appliance. This mechanism connects to the water line on the outside of the unit, so that it can filter house water before it ever reaches the ice maker and water dispenser on the inside. Visit a local hardware store and ask for assistance with finding a universal in-line water filter.

Step 4

Contact a professional water filter company to learn about installing whole-home systems. These connect the main water line that feeds not only into your kitchen, but the bathroom and the laundry room. Also consider a system that softens the water, removing hard minerals, in addition to being able to filter house water. This can improving the quality of water for when you take a shower or wash clothes or use the dishwasher.

Step 5

Install under-sink or faucet water filters at each water source in your home. Many homes only have one faucet where they need to filter house water, which is in the kitchen. However, people with larger rooms may have wine bars and other rooms that are used for entertainment that also need filtered water.

Tips

Sources and Citations

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