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227 of 231 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's Excellent!,
By Jonathan (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
This is an excellent product that does EXACTLY what it says it will do. However, just because it does remove so many contaminants doesn't necessarily mean your water's going to taste awesome. There are other factors that go into the taste of water. For instance, I find that Poland Springs water registers about 20-25 on the meter and personally it tastes better to me than my local tap water once it's been run through this filter and registers 0.
With that said, my tap water definitely tastes much better than it does at its natural reading of about 250! It really is hard to drink when it's unfiltered, but when it's filtered it's a pleasure to drink. Not perfect according to my personal taste, but definitely perfectly drinkable. I wanted to address a few points others have made: 1. The time it takes to filter - yes, it does take awhile to filter. To fill the bottle, you have to fill the top part TWICE and let it filter through. I timed it tonight and it takes about 10-12 minutes to filter one round. So to fill the bottle would take between 20-25 minutes total. Well, once you know this - you can usually plan around it. I fill the top once and usually just let it sit while go off and do other things. I try to remember to come back anytime after about 15 minutes and fill it again. Also, keep in mind that the reason it does take so long is because it's doing such a thorough job of filtering your water! If it didn't take as long it wouldn't be getting your water so clean. 2. One reviewer complained that after about 4 weeks his water began to taste fishy. He also said he didn't want to change the filter when the TDS meter read 6. He said he was willing to let it go to 150. But the ZeroWater documentation that comes with the filter specifically states that if you don't change it at just about 6, that the water will begin to taste funny. I called them and asked why and they told me that because at 6 - the filter is so full of contaminants that it just starts making newly filtered water taste funny. Because at that point the water is not only going through the filter, but it's also going through all the contaminants in the filter! Makes sense. So all the reports you've read about water tasting funny - are true. But that's what happens when you use the filter too long. I too thought I wouldn't mind the TDS (total dissolved solids) level going higher than 6. Because my favorite water - Poland Springs was around 25. So I thought I could go to 25. But sure enough the water started tasting ever so slightly funny at 6. I actually let it go to 9 but by that time it really didn't taste good so I changed the filter. It didn't taste fishy as some have reported, but it definitely tasted a little funky. The company says that what happens after a TDS level of 6 is reached will vary from water system to water system. For me it might taste funky - while for someone else it might taste fishy. It all depends on what's in your water system to start with - and the combination of contaminants that are trapped in the filter. The good news was that by that point I had already used the filter for about 5 weeks! So that came in at about 60% of what I would have paid for bottled water! So it did save a little money! But the best part is - no more carrying heavy cartons of water around! And no more having a thousand little bottles to throw out each week! By the way when you read some of the reviews that state the filter didn't last very long - that doesn't really tell you anything unless you know several factors. One, you'd have to know how many people were drinking from it and how much they used. Two, you'd have to know what the TDS level of the water they're filtering is. If they tell you the filter only lasted 2 weeks and it's feeding four people and their TDS level is 400, then they're actually getting really good mileage out of it! So for your info, my review covers the use of just one person who consumes 1 full Zerowater container a day. And the TDS level of the water I'm filtering is about 250. So if you know the TDS of your water, and how much you would consume, you can compare. If yours is 125 - then you could expect to get twice as much use out of each filter. 3. Size of the container and filtering time. The container holds about half a gallon of water. For one person this should be enough for the whole day. For two people or more it seems it would start to be a bit of a hassle keeping it filled. But for one person it's fine. One reviewer complained that the size of the filter itself was too big and displaces too much water in the container - causing it not to hold as much water as it could. Well, all that is true. However, what he didn't figure is that the filter has to be large in order to get the TDS level to 0! The little Brita & Pur filters are much smaller, but they do basically nothing! They filter out maybe 25% of the contaminants. This filters out ALL of the dissolved solids. And it's just the physics of filtering. The larger the filter, the more contaminants it will filter out. People have been really unrealistic and un-knowledgeable in a lot of these reviews. Due to the physics of filtering, the filter has to be large and therefore the time it takes the water to run through it will be long. And that explains the complaints of some that it's slow to filter. It's slow because it's doing such a thorough job. As to the complaints that the container should hold more water... I agree. It would be nice if it was larger and held more water. And it probably could be a little bit larger. But at its current size I've already seen a few complaints that it's too big for some refrigerators! If it was any larger it really would be too big. People would start to complain that it takes up all the space in their refrigerators! Due to the necessary size of the filter, there is a rather large water displacement in the storage container that causes it to hold less water than it otherwise would. I get around this problem by pouring all the water into an insulated stainless steel pitcher that I got from Starbucks a few years ago. This works great because the pitcher holds the exact same amount the Zerowater container holds. And the pitcher keeps the water cold all day. So while I'm pouring water out of the pitcher into a glass all day, the new fresh container of Zerowater is cooling down in the refrigerator. By the time I'm ready for another pitcher, the Zerowater is nice and cold and ready to go. I fill up the pitcher, and then I fill up the Zerowater container. Works out pretty well.
233 of 243 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great but with one big drawback...,
By
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
Most of us have had water filtration systems; either the under sink, mounts to faucet, or most commmonly, the filter-in-pitcher system. I saw this on a late night infomercial and was hooked. I will keep this review short and sweet:
Pluses: Nice attractive color, Spigot and valve ON the pitcher so no need to remove the pitcher from the fridge everytime you want some water, Zero-water meter is included (and can be stored IN the pitcher) Minuses: Capacity could be greater. Filter is so massive that you go through the filtered water QUICKLY, especially if you have a larger family; AND...the #1 drawback: This pitcher filters VERY SLOWLY. I am used to other Brita-type units and this is the slowest I've ever seen. Often when the pitcher is over half-full, and I fill the top reservoir, it doesn't drain completely after 3-4 HOURS. I have to keep a 1/2 gallon bottle in the refrigerator filled with cold filtered water since this filters so slowly. So, great concept, water is fantastic, but pitcher filters way too slowly if you have a family larger than 2-3.
67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good enough?,
By Ken Rider (East Coast) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
I read the reviews here before buying and they're pretty accurate...both the good and not so good. ON THE PLUS SIDE, the Zero does a great job purifying. And it comes with a digital water tester, which has been very helpful. I used the tester to compare the Zero water with my unfiltered tap water, with my old Brita and with a friend's Pur. The Zero won hands down. Capacity hasn't been a problem for our small family though, for four or more, it might not do as well. The Zero also has a small tap with a push button to let you pour the already-filtered water while waiting for the rest to come through. The feature is a nice idea.ON THE DOWN SIDE, Zero is taller than standard pitchers - 11" high instead of 10" like my old Brita. The extra inch means I can't put it on the top shelf of my fridge. It's worth measuring first. The filter price is also steeper than Brita or Pur but it works better too, so it's a tradeoff. The button tap on my first Zero broke after about 50 uses and once it broke, water just leaked out. I had to replace the whole pitcher and no longer use that feature. But the thing that has most disappointed is that the filters don't always let all of the water through. I've found this problem in about 1 out of every 3 filters. Even when I fill it up and leave it over nite, some of the water remains in the top compartment in the morning, despite having lots of room left in the pitcher. It's happened with new filters from several different lots, so I can't blame it on anything obvious. It's why I lowered my rating from 4-stars to 3. I'll raise it back up if the consistency improves. I hope the Zero Water folks take some of the Amazon reviewers' good suggestions into account for their next model. This one shows good potential but needs to get the bugs out before it gets my full recommendation.
142 of 158 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Mixed bag,
By
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
I purchased this as a replacement for a PUR pitcher that did not remove all the taste from my heavily treated city water. The good news is that this pitcher makes great tasting water. It really does taste as good as bottled water, like the advertising says. The bad news is that the pitcher itself is an ergonomic disaster. For starters, it is too tall to fit in my refrigerator. Second, the reservoirs are not the same size, so one must fill the top part a couple of times to get a full pitcher. It is also too easy to spill unfiltered water down the spout to the filtered water. It just does not work very well, which is really a bummer as the filter itself does an outstanding job. Back to the drawing board Zerowater!
53 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Product,
By
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
Great product. I was looking for something that would remove flouride that didn't involve tapping into a water line like reverse osmosis does. I was excited when I found this product and decided to give it a try. The water tastes great and I had no trouble getting a zero TDS reading on the first try. The dispenser at the bottom of the handle allows you to get water from the pitcher without having to even remove it from the fridge - very handy. The water does take a bit longer going through the filter than the Brita ones but not unbearably so. I'd highly recommend this product to anyone looking for a easy way to get cleaner water than what you can get from just a carbon filter.
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
USE THIS TO FILTER THE WATER & IMMEDIATELY PUT THE WATER INTO GLASS....,
By Dianne D. Pearce "LIFE COACH with Martha Beck" (Silver Spring, MD United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
I have one of these pitchers and I LOVE IT!!! I only fill it up to about 1/2 way because it does take a while to empty if you fill it up too much. What I prefer to do is to fill it up 1/2 way up over and over and empty the water into a glass canning jar or other glass container. I keep the full water containers on the counter, in my car, at my office, etc. I prefer to drink my water at room temp. I don't like to leave water in ANY type of plastic container so that is why I empty the water from the pitcher into a glass container.
My other favorite water storage container is this glass carafe with a glass lid from Walmart and Target made by Anchor Hocking. It is available here on Amazon at the following link: http://www.amazon.com/Glass-Pitcher-Water-Jug-Lid/dp/B000HDKI52/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=home-garden&qid=1252428262&sr=8-3 BUY ONE - I promise you will love the quality of the water. Use the tester to prove the quality.
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It works slowly, but efficiently.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
I used two other independent testing tools to test the water around my house, and luckily the New York municipal water supply is quite good. I received measurements averaging at around the 40 ppm range, which was way below the "typical" of 200 ppm (as indicated in their chart).
My Brita water filter takes the kitchen tap down from 33 ppm to 24 ppm, and the ZeroWater filter takes it down to a real, true, 000. All three water testers verified this, including the bundled tester (I always use third-party tools when measuring a company's claims). This filter is virtually flawless, if not for the speed of the filtration. Granted, it takes a while to process through the five-states of their carbon-block "system", but it is still quite something to have to wait an hour for a full pitcher of water; and I am only running 024 ppm water through it. A worthy investment if you're concerned about the quality of your drinking water. If you've got a larger family, I recommend getting the "jug" version of the ZeroWater filter. As far as I know, the company holds true to their claim. Absolutely, truly clean water.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I Didn't Believe In This Pitcher - But I Was Wrong!,
By Agent Seven (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
I have long been forced to think of myself as an inadvertent water snob. Most people seem to go through life drinking tap water or just simply buying whatever bottled water happened to be on sale the day they went to the grocery store, but I think that's because they really aren't big fans of water in general. I am a fan. Waters develop a REPUTATION with me. Tap water? Out of the question in all but the pickiest of municipalities, and even they aren't as great as the locals swear. I can taste it. If your water's got anything more than what's left behind after the reverse osmosis process, I know it. I can feel it. Tosh, people would say. You're full of it! But now with Zero Water, I know it to be actually true! More on that in a bit.
For years now I've been impatiently shrugging off the unwashed water drinking masses who are strident in their insistence that their Brita pitcher is GOOD ENOUGH FOR THEM and they CAN"T TASTE THE DIFFERENCE between the output of their Pur tap filter and bottled water! Well, that's because you drink Arrowhead, I would rejoinder - you might as well be drinking tap water! Pff! You're just a water snob - the inevitable reply. And so it was that when I began seeing commercials for the Zero Water pitcher, I confess I didn't believe. A pitcher that could remove everything from your water - even better than RO? Yeah, right. WHATEVER, late-night television infomercial, I'll believe it when I see it. Just wait until I get my hands on your gimmicky little magic wand. Surely the fix was in and this was just snake oil. Eventually, I purchased the pitcher, just to prove my point. Remember I said water had a reputation with me? Arrowhead? Rubbish. Nestle? Rubbish, but better than Arrowhead. Aquafina? Good. Sparklett's? Not bad at all. Dasani? Best. The RO system at my old house: heaven. I had samples of Dasani, Arrowhead and Nestle on hand when I brought the pitcher home and of course, Phoenix's horrifying municipal tap water - which is absolutely disgusting. I filtered a batch of tap water through the Zero Water pitcher, and while that was going, I tested the other waters. To my delight, EVERYTHING was in line with my expectations. Phoenix tap water: 460(!). Arrowhead: 230. Nestle: 075. Dasani: 016. And to my utter amazement, Zero Water: 000. None of this would have mattered if it were not for the taste. The water that comes from the Zero Water pitcher does indeed taste like the finest bottled water ever to pass over your lips. I was really wowed. Until I ran the numbers. One star is deducted in this review, though it must be said it is only partially Zero Water's fault. With Phoenix's tap water so ridiculously high in contaminants, even Zero Water itself says that we can expect to get only 8-15 gallons before the filter goes bad. Our filter went bad before two weeks was up (although we did have four house guests at the time). You can tell when the filter goes bad because the water has a sour, acrid aftertaste that is extremely unpleasant, even though the meter only reads 6. I don't rightly know how much water we got from the pitcher during that two weeks, but the numbers go like this: A 24-pack of Dasani costs about $5. That amounts to 3.75 gallons. That's about $11 for 8 gallons (the low end of expectations from the Zero Water pitcher). At $15 then, Zero Water's filters are in fact more expensive than the bottled water I love. The high end of Zero Water's expectations for my tap water is 15 gallons. It would cost nearly $20 for me to buy that much bottled water, so the jury is still out in my case as to whether it is actually worth the money versus bottled water. But I do know one thing: even if it's more expensive, I'm not lugging around bottled water twice a week and polluting the environment with reams and reams of plastic when I use the pitcher, so you know - advantage Zero Water! As to all the other complaints, I didn't find the pitcher to be flimsy or ill-designed at all. It only takes about five minutes for the water in the basin to go through the filter in my experience. Yes you have to fill it multiple times and yes the volume this pitcher holds is comparatively small - but in my personal opinion, all this can be forgiven in light of the incredibly high quality of the output. Ultimately, I think, I will not give up my installed RO water system, but until I can get that in the new place here, I'm happy to have my Zero Water pitcher.
27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not worth the cost!!!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
Wife came home and said that they reviewed this filter system as a WOW good water item. So, I said ok let me look. Bought one from Amazon, said good cheap price, $35.
Water tasted real good. So, after first filter started to taste bad and go past the 006 that they reccomend changing the filter. comes with some handy electronic device free with your pitcher to test the water. It's 000 when the pitcher is fresh filter. When bad after 006, you replace it. 2 filters are $40. So, after having some bad tasting water, replaced second one. It read 013. Third filter I figured I would test the water every 5 gallons. Started out first pitcher and was 001 to start. Never did see it go to 000. After just 6 gallons, the filter was spitting out 008. So, by ZERO's reccomendations, you should change your filter. 6 gallons mind you. I am not sure what this 000 number is, but I refuse to pay $40 every 10 gallons of water. Water tastes real good, but I am sure that there are filter systems that would do the same 000 thing and since I have their device, I can test it out on some other system. Pros: Excellent water, nice pitcher and spicket. Cons: Filters done last but like 6 gallons when house water reads 199 with their device. Filters cost way to much for only 10 -12 gallson of water per 2. Reccomendation: Unless you have tons of money, I don't see buying this system. Total waste of money for expensive filters, and the filters are so big that they probably the same as putting a plastic water bottle in the land fill.
43 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Great taste, terrible workmanship,
By
This review is from: ZeroWater ZD-001 Filtration Pitcher with Electronic Tester, Filter Included (Kitchen)
You can get great tasting water with this for a few days. The filter started cracking after making a few gallons of water. The filter is very heavy. The reservoir is very small. You can filter water in small portions, and that takes for ever. Life span alone is enough to make you think twice about paying almost $40 for this product. Needs improvement.
I emailed them and let them know about the cracks, but no one responded to my email. Don't buy. $38 pays for a lot of refills at the vending machine!! |
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