Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 04 Jul 2005 01:33:44 GMT, Rosalie B. wrote:
wrote: Peggie Hall wrote: I find it interesting that people will drink water that's been a bottle for months, but won't drink water that's only been in their tank for a week. In case you aren't aware of it, tests have shown that the bacteria etc count in most bottled water is actually higher than that in tap water. Only proving again that perception really is 99% of reality. ![]() FYI most bottled "spring water" (not) is percoltated with ozone before bottling to destroy or incapacitate bacteria for up to 2 years, as are the bottles - a regulatory body requirement for all bottlers that is also product-tested on every batch an ongoing basis. A few plants accomplish this using high-intensity UV instead, to the same tough standards. You may be aware that a few large vessels have UV process treatment of drinking water, too. We don't buy bottled water as a general rule, but my children sometimes do. I've got some bottles that they have used, and I refill them from the tap to take on car trips or walks. My daughter also reused the water bottles which she buys and takes them to ball games or on her boat for the kids to drink. But the real preception/reality joke is that good home well water, and even NYC tap water, taste superior to most people than bottled springwaters, and consistently beat them all out in double-blind consumer taste tests. As a former participant in a bottled water venture, it all strikes me as legalized marketing scam of sorts. :-) Marinas seem to have caught on fast to it. Just 2 nights ago dining with a yatch owner/friend at one, we encountered 2 different upscale-market bottles of springwater on our table. Now, in any other country, if a bottle of water were furnished with your table setting, it would be complimentary of the establishment, or otherwise be considered an insult. But in this case if you want to open the bottle & drink any, it costs you over $10/bottle. Quite good marketing, yes? Most people crack one or both open instinctively, and others decide they want a sip, before they know they will be banged for it. I once asked for water at a local crab house, and they told me that I'd have to pay for bottled water because they didn't have any water that was safe to drink. I didn't buy any. The Owner's wife was undecided as to whether the tall, round, clear one from Scandanavia looked more like a lava lamp or a sex symbol. I told her it was obviously a marina sex symbol, since it was grey on top. ;-) grandma Rosalie There's been only two instances where I really liked the water I was drinking. The first was Anchorage AK city water....the other was my well. Norm B |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a little PUR filter on the galley sink faucet. I refill all my
drinking water bottles using it as the filter, and it tastes great. I also use it for cooking water. The regular tank water is fine for showers, cleaning, washing hands, dishes, etc. I have fiberglass tanks that, no matter how much I clean with bleach, etc., still pick up that "fiberglass" smell after a couple of weeks. I use up the water in the tanks at least once a month and refill with fresh. |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Keith" wrote:
I have a little PUR filter on the galley sink faucet. I refill all my drinking water bottles using it as the filter, and it tastes great. I also use it for cooking water. The regular tank water is fine for showers, cleaning, washing hands, dishes, etc. I have fiberglass tanks that, no matter how much I clean with bleach, etc., still pick up that "fiberglass" smell after a couple of weeks. I use up the water in the tanks at least once a month and refill with fresh. I have a problem with those filters, in that I don't think they are very sanitary. Wet all the time and prime breeding ground for nasty stuff. Bob put one on the sink at the Baltimore house, but he hasn't put one back on anything after we moved. grandma Rosalie |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
HarryKrause wrote:
Like many things, the "taste" of water is subjective, assuming it isn't loaded up with foul-tasting or smelling chemicals. For some reason "boat water" always tastes "flat" to me. I don't drink any to find out, unless it's by accident. We have well water at our house, and it is pretty decent for drinking, especially since we filter it. But I still rather take bottled water on board, and drink that. It's no trouble for me to do so. I fill bottles from my well for drinking water, too, and consider it SOP until/unless yatchs are fitted with a separate drinking water tank & associated piping system & tap(s). Most shipboard tradition & design has always segregated potable from drinking systems, no matter how clean any load of the former may be or what it may taste like. It's ingrained for other reasons that, while of lesser consideration on a yacht, haven't just gone away. But it does seem odd to me that installing a separate small tank & appropriate system for drinking water hasn't caught on much in the boating world - considering everything else that is bought & installed at great cost. Such as enough navgear to sail to Pluto through a meteor field without touching the wheel nor picking up a pair of binoculars. :-) Perhaps many assume there'll be good drinking water available for free on Pluto, too, and that tank contamination never happens? |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
HarryKrause wrote:
I have two boats with refrigerators. One is a 25' Parker with a 12V refrigerator/freezer unit. It has never been used. The refer or the boatBG? Damn thing hooks into the two batteries on board, and even though it is supposed to shut itself off if the voltage drops below a certain level. Who knows if it will? And of course, I could switch off one battery and run it off the other, but will I remember? What it needs is its own dedicated battery with isolaters, but I haven't gotten around to doing that bit of wiring. The boat I'm presently involved with has an older ('78?) Norcold dual-voltage refer of the usual size. This is the sort that has its own internal inverter & changes over to 12vdc whenever it's available at its terminals. During delivery trials I noted that on 12v it only draws a little over 1 amp. I have little exp using 12v refers other than an RV 3-way I didn't like, so to me this indicates 1 of 4 things: - the refer is slightly hosed though it cools OK even with its no-good door gasket (big gap at bottom in the usual place); or, - it is unbelieveably efficient; or, - the monitoring instrumentation (Link 2000) is lying (I haven't been through that panel and verified its setup yet); or, - you could run the sucker with only a small solar panel charging the bank almost indefinitely. But as for water chilling, it'd seem a natural for a cruising boat in hot climates to obtain it part-time via a 2nd exchanger from engine-driven A/C, particularly since most who can afford such boats consider "roughing it" to mean badly-dressed line handlers & slow room service. Or for the rest of us, fulltime via the compact/simple/poor-man's route of routing DW through a little fin-tube exchanger in the refer, perhaps using up the usual otherwise-cramped space up high next to its freezer (evap). Of course, once someone begins fabbing & selling the little exchanger to boaters, it won't be a poor-man's route anymore. ;-) But finned tubing is common enough that you could roll your own, and poking 2 holes in the rear to plumb it is a no-brainer for a careful person. You might enjoy having a 5gal tank of nice well water piped to a small DW-dedicated handpump spout that'd give you one big cold glass at a time. This DW tank might also be an ordinary springwater carboy secured with a 2-hole stopper - you could chuck it for a new one anytime it got suspicious, or rinse it out easily, or even have 2 for home filling/swapout. Finally, there'd be a lot more room in the already-small refer. |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
HarryKrause wrote:
I appreciate all this, but...it just goes to the core of my point, and that is, it is a hell of a lot easier to bring aboard a few six packs of bottled water when we go out than go through what you are describing to run a fridge or have decent tasting water. We have a commercial icemaker at home. (I used to do a lot of fishing in Florida, and took it with me from there to Maryland) I empty its "product" out into large plastic bags during the week and put those into our freezer. When I head for the boat, I simply grab the bags of ice and when I get to the boat we're using, I toss the ice into an ice chest, where it keeps, if I want it to, for at least a few days. Bottles of water go on top, along with other liquid refreshments, and whatever food that needs to stay cold. No fuss, no muss, no plumbing, no electricity, no nuttin'. I know this is not the elegant solution, but our 25-footer doesn't have a generator, and I really do not want to find myself in the position of trying to start an engine whose battery is down because the damned refrig forgot to switch itself off when the voltage dropped or I forgot to flip some damned switch. If I were cruising for any significant periods of time, I wouldn't be doing it in THAT boat, anyway. It's just a day or overnight kinda boat. But I appreciate the elegance of what you are saying. I understand what you are saying, and although we have a built in refer/freezer on our boat, we also do not use it for overnight or day trips either. We don't even do as much as you do - we just bring a cooler with some 2 liter soda bottles of frozen water in them. (We fill them with water and freeze them at home) If they do happen to melt, we can drink the water. Our kids gave us a 12v refrigerator for the car last Xmas, which we intend to use for the boat for situations like that. It's too large to be viable in the car. I have trained myself not to need cold water to drink. When the engine heats up the water in the tanks (as it will if it is on for any length of time), I will drink water from bottles that we've brought from home. (We don't buy water in bottles.) Our home refrigerator has a ice cube maker in it, but it is not hooked up. grandma Rosalie |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Propane Sniffer Meltdown | Cruising | |||
Final Bilge Wiring Schematic | Cruising | |||
Water in the bilge. The saga continues... | General | |||
Water in the bilge. The saga continues... | Cruising | |||
bilge colour | Boat Building |