After the rolling boil a minute at minimum. I let it go two or three minutes.Any info on how long it needs to be at a boil?
After the rolling boil a minute at minimum. I let it go two or three minutes.Any info on how long it needs to be at a boil?
But what about your 3rd eye?
I wouldn't mess with pool chlorine. You don't know what's in it and the concentration would have to be super high to be effective in thousands of gallons of pool water. Even if you used a tiny amount it could be a fatal amount.
Also liquid bleach goes bad after about a year or at least has a 1 year use by date.
In a pinch, chlorine bleach is a quick and easy way to disinfect drinking water. The package might say to use it within a year, but it lasts mych longer than that if stored inside at moderate temperatures. After long periods, it doesn't go bad, but might loose some of its stregnth.
The general recommendation is to add 8 drops of bleach per gallon of water. Then let it sit and if you can't smell the bleach, add 8 more drops. It should be allowed to sit for a while to let the chlorine do its magic.
A swimming pool test kit can be used to measure chlorine residual in water. After sitting for 8 hours or so, if it has any measurable chlorine in the water, its good to use.
Liquid bleach or pool shock is usually sodium hypochlotite. The solid stuff is calcium hypochlorite. Either will work for disinfecting water. The math can get confusing to figure out how much to use.
Admittedly, the bleach trick is about the last solution I want to use, but still good info.
On a related note- what (if anything) can treat/filter water with chemicals in it? I know thats one of the big "do not's" as in "this product will filter 99.9% of bacteria but will not remove chemicals from water" you see on filters, etc.
Without water treatment or fractional distillation, activated coconut shell charcoal is good at removing chemicals from water especially if you maintain a low flowrate to maximize residence time. I thought we went through this on another thread but I store some particulate and charcoal filter cartridges that could be used if we bug out or eventually run out of fuel to run the well pump.Admittedly, the bleach trick is about the last solution I want to use, but still good info.
On a related note- what (if anything) can treat/filter water with chemicals in it? I know thats one of the big "do not's" as in "this product will filter 99.9% of bacteria but will not remove chemicals from water" you see on filters, etc.
Activated charcoal would be my first guess too. But I'd use any other available option to avoid chemical tainted water before I'd even think of drinking it - especially without a good way to test if I got the contaminates out.Without water treatment or fractional distillation, activated coconut shell charcoal is good at removing chemicals from water especially if you maintain a low flowrate to maximize residence time. I thought we went through this on another thread but I store some particulate and charcoal filter cartridges that could be used if we bug out or eventually run out of fuel to run the well pump.
I would suggest running it through a normal coffee filter first to reduce the sediment load and prolong the life of the brita.I agree with BD here. Chlorine would be my last option. Why not use a basic Brita water filter to remove sediment from river water and just boil afterwards?
I did say you'd have to know how to do the math.I wouldn't mess with pool chlorine. You don't know what's in it and the concentration would have to be super high to be effective in thousands of gallons of pool water. Even if you used a tiny amount it could be a fatal amount.
Also liquid bleach goes bad after about a year or at least has a 1 year use by date.
If you're really worried about the quality, setup a still.Boiling. If you don't have safe bottled water, you should boil your water to make it safe to drink. Boiling is the surest method to kill disease-causing organisms, including viruses, bacteria, and parasites.
I'm not that far from Lake Erie. That probably won't run out.
I’ll split the water with you. 50/50.I probably live a lot closer to you than I realized
No idea if the factory still sells to the public but I remember long ago as a kid my parents would stop and buy a couple cases of meat at what I guess was a factory outlet store in Ohio. Might want to check it out, my folks were all about saving $$Also keep an eye out on amazon and Walmart for keystone meats. Our ready-to-eat meats make your family meals easier
from what I have seen, they have the most unadulturated product I have seen and it has a solid shelf life as well for the medium long storables. This can was picked up from amazon a month or so ago and is best by 6/8/25. Their ground beef makes good tacos, and we have also had their pork, turkey and beef chunks. All are good.
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My wife and I have had and use a Sawyer pump style filter for years possibly decades with out trouble.Lifestraws are great, but look at the Sawyer products. If you treat it right, a Sawyer filter can last you a lifetime of backpacking. Put one on the top of a 40oz Smart Water bottle, and you can take water with you rather than having to suck it out of a puddle or stream. With the right fittings, you can even place one inline on a hydration bladder. They’re so much more versatile than a lifestraw for just a couple bucks more.
There is no way I'd trust a home gamer still to remove chemical contamination. Salt - sure! By chemical contamination? No way! Especially without a good test.If you're really worried about the quality, setup a still.
It can eliminate a lot of chemical hazards that boiling alone can't. You will want to learn how to do it properly though, throw away the first bit and stop before the pot goes dry.
Bonus is that it can be used on fermented products to create stuff for trade, medicinal and recreational use as well.
My wife and I have had and use a Sawyer pump style filter for years possibly decades with out trouble.
LifeStraw is great for lightweight portable use but is also fragile and as said elsewhere difficult to transport water.
I can fill a 1 gallon container in about a minute or so with my Sawyer pump!
Depends on how thirsty you are I guess.There is no way I'd trust a home gamer still to remove chemical contamination. Salt - sure! By chemical contamination? No way! Especially without a good test.
I say that as someone who has both run a recreational still and worked in various analytical laboratories for many years.
I agree with you as an absolute last ditch effort. But short of that, I'd go with a biological hazard over chemical if the choice was available. We know how to treat biological hazards effectively, even if the finished product is unpleasant. Chemical hazards, not so much.Depends on how thirsty you are I guess.
Obviously if you have a choice, you don't risk it. But this thread is about a SHTF situation where you don't have a choice.
If all you've got is questionable water or death, I would run it through the still. Better odds than anything else.
If you've got a carbon filter, absolutely use it, but run the water through the still first. The carbon filter will last a lot longer and the water will taste better, and maybe it'll catch something that slipped through the distillation.
Also, unlike many filters a still doesn't have a shelf life or a limit on how many contaminates it can eliminate. You could use it for as many gallons of water as you have fuel to heat, even with heavy contamination. Could even pass it down to the grandkids in a real TEOTWAWKI situation.
There are also lots of types of contamination that aren't acutely dangerous, but you might want to eliminate too. Maybe you've got a well, the water is safe but tastes like ass. Had one of those as a kid.
We drank and cooked with bottled water, but washed dishes, etc with well water. When you can't pick up bottled water anymore maybe the still would be a good way to refill them.
Bottom line, your attitude is 100% correct in a world where clean safe water is available from a tap. In a different world, maybe not.
Well, distillation is effective against both. I'm not sure how many biological pathogens can survive distillation, let alone manage to make it into the receiver but I bet that number is pretty small.I agree with you as an absolute last ditch effort. But short of that, I'd go with a biological hazard over chemical if the choice was available. We know how to treat biological hazards effectively, even if the finished product is unpleasant. Chemical hazards, not so much.
What's the boiling point of gasoline, or fuel oil, or lawn fertilizer, or pesticides (any of them)? And can you control the temperature on your moonshine still to ensure they are separated? And did you boil the pot so much that stuff spashed into your condensor? Its not going to happen.Well, distillation is effective against both. I'm not sure how many biological pathogens can survive distillation, let alone manage to make it into the receiver but I bet that number is pretty small.
And let's face it, you are going to be looking at unknown quality water in any of these situations. If you've got lab results telling you what's in the water, you probably don't need homebrew filtration equipment to make it potable.
So, you're looking to drink some water from a random source you found. You don't see any obvious signs of contamination (biological or chemical) or you're going to look elsewhere. This is NY, not the desert after all, so water sources aren't hard to come by.
If you have the ability, you're going to want course filtration like a coffee filter followed by distillation and then carbon filtration for the best quality water you can get.
Obviously it's not something your carrying around in a BOB, but having the means is a good plan.
If you're bugging out to some fixed location, presumably you have secured a water source there long before the SHTF and you'll have a well you can trust or something and if filtration is required you'll have a proper setup.
Now, maybe you've settled into your bug out cabin for a long time, and your last disposable filter cartridge for your well is finished. Do you just drink the crappy water, or home brew something that doesn't depend on unobtainables like activated carbon and filter cartridges?
I didn't say not to learn WTF you're doing.What's the boiling point of gasoline, or fuel oil, or lawn fertilizer, or pesticides (any of them)? And can you control the temperature on your moonshine still to ensure they are separated? And did you boil the pot so much that stuff spashed into your condensor? Its not going to happen.
Its hard enough to do that under controled conditions. Relying on a still for purification without experience is like the guy who thinks he's going to be able to start a fire with a bow drill without practicing first - fun to watch, bit an excersize in frustration.
The 'toss the heads & tails' works good enough for distilling alcohol. It works because you're working with a known product to start with. For other chemicals, who knows. It might make things better or worse.I didn't say not to learn WTF you're doing.
But fine, you drink the unfiltered water. I'm sure that'll be better.
We are talking about something you're pretty sure is 99.9% water to begin with.
You put it in the still, toss the first bit that comes out (the unknown low boiling contaminates) and you leave some in the pot (the high boiling contaminates).
Whatever you get out is going to be a lot better than what what you started with.
Obviously with so many unknowns and restrictions it's a hazardous game to play, but if you make the assumption that what your starting with is almost all water, the odds that you are going to have some weird azetrope that happens to concentrate in the middle 80% of your distillate is going to be pretty low.The 'toss the heads & tails' works good enough for distilling alcohol. It works because you're working with a known product to start with. For other chemicals, who knows. It might make things better or worse.
For myself, I wouldn't trust it. If I was in a pinch, I'd go with filtration, boiling and filtration through charcoal if the source was that questionable. Or filtration and chlorination if fuel for boiling was in short supply and chlorine was available.
There are no right answers - just sharing ideas to consider.
Although I've been paid to make potable water from a number of sources and would be able to manage under severe circumstances, I think that in the most probable bug-out or home-out scenarios for us it will not be a panic based on availability of shallow hand pumpable wells, known natural springs, already drilled residential wells, and clean reservoirs. When the contingencies evaporate and we have to get creative to purify putrid contaminated water sources, most of the local populations would have likely already ceased to exist or we are trapped, isolated, and under seige.The 'toss the heads & tails' works good enough for distilling alcohol. It works because you're working with a known product to start with. For other chemicals, who knows. It might make things better or worse.
For myself, I wouldn't trust it. If I was in a pinch, I'd go with filtration, boiling and filtration through charcoal if the source was that questionable. Or filtration and chlorination if fuel for boiling was in short supply and chlorine was available.
There are no right answers - just sharing ideas to consider.