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Two Popular Drinking Water Filters You Should Think Twice About.

By: Rich Eng

Comparing the cost of filters for drinking water can be very confusing. You might think that a drinking water filter that costs more does a better job, but that's not always the case. We looked at 10 of the top rated drinking water filters and found they ranged from $34.95 to $420.00 - a wide range of costs indeed! What factors go into making one water filter so much more expensive than another?

Mark up can be a concern. It's a common enough practice: an enterprising business person buys a product direct from the manufacturer, then profits by reselling it at a higher price. Resellers are companies that do not manufacture anything. These folks travel the world over in search of products that may be purchased for a miniscule amount and sold for alot more. In fact, drinking water filters are no different from any other product.

So, if you can buy a drinking water filter (or any other product for that matter) directly from the factory, you will save money. Sometimes the amount that you save is enough to buy two or three for the same price. The mark up by the reseller of the product is crucial. If you do some research, you soon learn that most manufacturers of drinking water filters charge about the same price or at least in the same ball park. The average price is around $140.00 for a counter top system.
So, are those very cheap models any good? Brita and Pur are the most highly advertised and also the most frequently heard. So, let's take a closer look at them to see whether they really deliver.

A Brita drinking water filter for the faucet retails for about $34.
It removes chlorine, but not chlorine by-products known as THMs. It makes no sense to me to block only one of them. Chlorine and THMs have both been linked to cancer. In breast cancer patients, the measure of THMs in the fat cells is elevated as compared to that of healthy women. Experts consider that the cause for many new cases of cancer occurring every day is due to chlorine.

There are some other impurities that a Brita drinking water filter cannot block.
These include VOCs (chemicals found paint thinners, dry cleaning solvents and gasoline) and MTBE, a gasoline additive. Here's a worrisome fact: all the previously mentioned contaminants have shown up in public water supplies, and conventional water treatment processes won't remove them. The concentration limits established by federal regulation as "safe" are regarded by some in the scientific community as far too high, given that even low exposure, when continued over years, can increase the incidence of heart disease and cancer.

PUR drinking water filters remove even less impurities than Brita. Often, consumers seek out PUR drinking water filters because the flavor and hue of their home water supply doesn't meet their standards. Unfortunately, a large percentage of them are completely unaware about the dangerous chemical contaminants that are not filtered by the PUR filters they buy. They also don't realize that, while it's very easy to filter chlorine, it's not so easy to remove THMs. These filters also do not block pesticides and herbicides that are commonly used throughout the United States. Anything that is used in the environment eventually ends up in the reservoir and finally makes it in to your home. As hazardous and difficult to remove as these chemicals are, a good drinking water filter should safely extract them.

The finest drinking water filters are sensibly priced and block almost anything. Research and spend time looking before you decide. Please check my website listed below if you would like more information. Surprising enough, the ones that are promoted the most are not always the best.

Article Source: http://www.direct-articles.net

Rich Eng serves as the leader of a high growth healthcare services business for a Fortune 500 company. A 20 year industry veteran and "holistic health and fitness" coach, he constantly researches better ways to improve one's mind, body and spirit. Visit his site at www.clean-filtered-water.com to learn more about the drinking water filters he personally recommends and why he chose this product after extensive research.

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