Submitted by t3hs4v4g3 t3_10uwgj9 in BuyItForLife

I had the long rectangular Brita dispenser, and it has started leaking (I suspect my kids were a bit rough on it). Any recommendations for perhaps a sturdier one? I prefer a large capacity, we have a large family and it gets a lot of use.

I understand the filters have to be replaced, lol before anyone thinks Iā€™m looking for a BIFL including filter.

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Agreeable-Tadpole461 t1_j7e9a36 wrote

A Big Berkey water filter is very much BIFL

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t3hs4v4g3 OP t1_j7e9kq6 wrote

Was just looking at those! Thank you.

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tesla323 t1_j7edr3w wrote

If you can, find someone who has one and ask them to let you taste the water from it. Not everyone (myself included) likes the taste.

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-SeaBrisket- t1_j7gbyrv wrote

I've had one for maybe a decade. Love it and the filters rarely need replacement. Just be aware that the filtration is slow. It might not keep up with your needs if your family demands a lot of filtered water. That said I've seen one of their larger ones in use as a customer dispenser at a coffee shop so apparently it met that demand.

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sponge_welder t1_j7ledu2 wrote

Note that while they are built well, they can be kind of a pain, they're over 18 inches tall so they probably won't fit in the fridge or under cabinets unless you get the travel size one. They also aren't ANSI or NSF certified, even though they claim to exceed the relevant ANSI and NSF standards, which just feels like a red flag to me, not to mention that people have had issues reproducing their claimed results. Their website is also pretty sketchy, it feels very prepper/truther-centric

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DeltaAlphaGulf t1_j7kxy4q wrote

Have you considered having a system installed under your sink with a dedicated faucet?

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t3hs4v4g3 OP t1_j7lmm13 wrote

I actually was looking into that last night. Seems like RO systems are the best. Is there a system you recommend? I was trying to find a system that did RO and remineralising both.

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OmahaMike402 t1_j7gbi56 wrote

Berkey. Scratch and dent section. I picked up a Royal ~3gal. Found aftermarket filters that were more affordable

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t3hs4v4g3 OP t1_j7gcizr wrote

Scratch and dent in store or online?

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OmahaMike402 t1_j7gcl9u wrote

Online

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t3hs4v4g3 OP t1_j7gcqy9 wrote

Found it, just took me a minute šŸ˜‘

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OmahaMike402 t1_j7gczya wrote

It was recommended to me upon purchase to sample the filtration ability by putting some food coloring in the water reservoir. My red water came out Crystal f****** clear and it even works with no power. I've taken at camping and from Lake water through it and felt safe also.

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DemonEyesJeo t1_j7fun3b wrote

My big rectangular Zero Water filter has been going on for 3 years strong. The lid is flimsy and the hinges can break if you're not.careful. doesn't impact the clean water at all though.

It also comes with a water tester (can't.recall the correct name) but it's.got instructions that tell you when it's time to.change your filter and such.

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Diotima245 t1_j7nhxtk wrote

Iā€™m using a waterdrop system under my sink around $60.

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Straegen t1_j7ni673 wrote

IMO get an under sink filter. I suggest either the Filtrete 3US-MAX-S01 or an Aquasana AQ-MF-1 (buy quality fittings as the kit ships with subpar ones). They essentially filter the cold water side of the faucet and remove most of the funky taste of most public water. If you are on well water, consider something more substantial but both of these will remove the nasty stuff such as lead and are relatively higher flow with affordable and simple filter changes.

Easy to install and will last years with regular filter changes every six months or so. I put our last one in twelve years ago and still going strong. The Aquasana is a better overall filter but frankly the Filtrete on public water gets the job done just as well for half the price.

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