Bottle makes dirty water drinkable

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Sep 12, 2007
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This looks cool:

Bottle makes dirty water drinkable
By Christopher Hope, Home Affairs Correspondent
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/mai...WAVCBQYIV0?xml=/news/2007/09/12/nwater112.xml



The way fresh water is supplied to disaster-hit regions could be revolutionised after an Ipswich-based businessman invented a £190 bottle that makes foul-smelling water drinkable in seconds.

Michael Pritchard hopes that the bottle could be a life-saver for refugees in disaster regions where access to clean drinking water is vital.

However, the military are already latching on to his idea. Four hours after Mr Pritchard launched his new "Life Saver" bottle at the DESI defence show in London yesterday, he sold out his entire 1,000 stock. "I am bowled over," he said.

Military chiefs are excited because the bottles, which can distill either 4,000 litres or 6,000 litres without changing the filter, will have huge benefits for soldiers who hate drinking iodine-flavoured water.

In July a protype of the bottle was voted "Best Technological Development" at the Soldier Technology conference.

Mr Pritchard, who runs a water treatment business in Ipswich, was inspired after watching coverage of the tsunami in south-east Asia on Boxing Day 2004 and of Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana the following year.

He was amazed to see refugees waiting for days to get any fresh water.

He said: "Something had to be done. It took me a little while and some very frustrating prototypes but eventually I did it."

Conventional filters can cut out bacteria measuring more than 200 nanometres but not viruses, which typically are 25 nanometres long.

Mr Pritchard's bottle can clean up any water - including faecal matter - using a filter that cuts out anything longer than 15 nanometres, which means that viruses can be filtered out without the use of chemicals.

nwater112.jpg
 
This is an awesome idea. I can see where this might save many lives and make hard times a little more bareable. GREAT POST ! !:thumbup:
 
At a glance it looks like a great filter.

"which can distill either 4,000 litres or 6,000 litres without changing the filter"

This left me a little confused though. Is that just poor word choice on the writers part?

At 190 Brit that's pretty steep. Mac
 
At a glance it looks like a great filter.

"which can distill either 4,000 litres or 6,000 litres without changing the filter"

This left me a little confused though. Is that just poor word choice on the writers part?

At 190 Brit that's pretty steep. Mac

I think so. Writer evidently did not know that the word "Distill" has a specific meaning. With the cost of the unit (looks like the FILTRATION cartridge is most of the cost), it would make sense to buy a second, less advanced filter to pre-filter the water before pouring it into this one. Still, it is interesting.

Codger
 
That is an incredible capacity-- 4000 liters (1000 gallons). I assume the two figures are for two different sizes. I can tell you right now that it will plug up quickly if there isn't a very good pre-filter. The price is steep, but not surprising for a new product in low production numbers. £190=$385US.
 
It will be awesome to get one, so if I get this right I can just pluck water from a local stream correct?
 
I see that clogging alot depending on the prefilter. I know my H2O filter clogs once in a blue moon. But maybe I will get one just to use and test out.
 
Nice! I look forward to it being tested and reviewed against other filter bottles out there. If his claims withstand scrutiny, the other companies won't be far behind.

-- FLIX
 
Nice! I look forward to it being tested and reviewed against other filter bottles out there. If his claims withstand scrutiny, the other companies won't be far behind.

-- FLIX
That's if I can get one and not cost a arm and a leg. During diasters the water gets affected by chemicals from vehicles, leaking oil, etc... So I wonder if it filters out chemicals too.
 
Nanofiltration does effect the mineral content of water. I'd need to see some information on the mineral content after filtering before being convinced.

Otherwise, great concept.
 
I looked up the word "distill" and it says you can use it as filtered/cleaned water, but if you look up "distilled" or "distillation" it says; a means of separating liquids through differences in their boiling points! Apparently it's in the wording, sneaky brits! but I still like the bottle, hope the price comes down.
 
The way fresh water is supplied to disaster-hit regions could be revolutionised after an Ipswich-based businessman invented a £190 bottle that makes foul-smelling water drinkable in seconds.
I'm a bit skeptical about a "businessman" that comes out from nowhere with another miracle product beats hands down anything on market (in both effectiveness and volume treated), because "he thought about it watching TV"... But who knows, that thing might actually work as described. I think I'd wait for further reports.
 
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