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    Free Articles at Neutron Marketing Article Publishing and Distribution » Home-and-family » Home-appliances » Reverse Osmosis Systems in Residential Neighborhoods
    Reverse Osmosis Systems in Residential Neighborhoods

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    by: PeterPatterson
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    Word Count: 571

    Marketers of residential reverse osmosis systems have done a great job at selling to many people that their systems are revolutionary equipment for safe drinking water. The truth is that reverse osmosis systems and its benefits are not exactly what people have been expecting.

    What is revolutionary is the fact that these systems are the first reverse osmosis systems built for home use and industrial use. Reverse osmosis has been a standard in water treatment facilities and used by the industrial world for quite some time. They are primarily used to keep mineral deposits from forming in machines such as boilers.

    Reverse Osmosis systems for residential use has only recently begun and is currently being explored. It's been marked and especially touted as a water purifying system that is a scaled down version of the filters used to clean water at treatment facilities. But what people do not know is that reverse osmosis systems at treatment facilities do not effectively remove harmful contaminants from the water supply completely.

    Even though the idea of residential reverse osmosis systems is a relatively new one, the reverse osmosis system is actually older technology that has been utilized for water treatment for over a century. First introduced in order to slow down the death rate from waterborne diseases, the system only worked moderately well. It wasn't until chlorine was introduced in 1908 that these systems began to be effective in cleaning water.

    The problem with reverse osmosis is that it was never designed to be primarily as a cleaning apparatus. The porous membrane filters used were primarily for demineralization purposes and were not for the removal of anything smaller or lighter than a water molecule. What that means is there is a chance that microscopic compounds can get into your drinking water. Unfortunately, many owners of residential reverse osmosis systems aren't finding out until after the fact.

    There are many toxic chemicals and bacteria flowing through our drinking water system, and most of them flow through the porous membrane filter along with the water. As does a horde of bacterial agents, that are way too small for even the membrane to capture. The primary worry of owners of residential reverse osmosis systems is that their system is quite helpless to thwart these contaminants.

    If reverse osmosis purifying systems can not remove these contaminants from water treatment plants, who is to say the residential home versions of these systems can do any better. Reverse osmosis is only the first stage of what should be a multi-pronged attack in eliminating these modern contaminants.

    Had many of the reverse osmosis systems residential owners done their research before they bought their unit, they would have known that these costly systems are not what they needed. They would have realized that there are whole house and point of use filtering systems that they could have gotten at a fraction of the price that they paid for these residential reverse osmosis systems

    So, residential reverse osmosis systems is definitely not the answer for pure, clean drinking water. What is necessary in combating the chemicals in your drinking water is the combination of an activated carbon filter and a multi block filter. In addition, a purchase of a sub-micron filter and an ion exchange unit, and you will be on your way to having pure, safe drinking water minus the contaminants.

    About the Author

    Peter Patterson is a health researcher and specializes on water purification. He currently is a contributing editor for The Truth About Water Filters, a site that offers consumer guidance on the best water filters for keeping your drinking water safe and clean.

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