Do you enjoy great-tasting drinking water when traveling in your RV?
 

Do you enjoy great-tasting drinking water when traveling in your RV?

Started by Gary Hatt - Publisher BCM, May 13, 2025, 05:10:14 PM

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Gary Hatt - Publisher BCM

Do you enjoy great-tasting drinking water when traveling in your RV to different places? Then check out the Clearsource water filter systems. I use mine in both the U.S. and Mexico, and have never had a problem drinking the water.

Watch this short video to see how their system cleans even the dirtiest water.

https://www.busconversionmagazine.com/clear-source-rv-video/

Visit their website:  https://www.clearsourcerv.com/

#Skoolie #BusConversion #WaterFilterSystems #CleanWater
1999 Prevost H3-45
Gary@BusConversionMagazine.com

Jim Blackwood

We have a Waterdrop reverse osmosis filter under the kitchen sink in the house and I'm thinking about something similar for the bus. It works very well but is just a little tall. Hoping I can find something similar that's about 15" tall by about 5 inches wide.

Jim
I saw it on the Internet. It MUST be true...

luvrbus

Those filters work good, only bad deal about R/0 is so much wasted water, Clear Choice filters are pricy for some  of their filters models but service is top notch with Clear Choice.AZ has the worst water on the planet and they work
Life is short drink the good wine first

Gary Hatt - Publisher BCM

Quote from: luvrbus on May 14, 2025, 12:25:11 PM
Those filters work good, only bad deal about R/0 is so much wasted water, Clear Choice filters are pricy for some  of their filters models but service is top notch with Clear Choice.AZ has the worst water on the planet and they work

Yes, and I have heard complaints about R/O systems in a bus from people waiting at the water tap for the person with these systems to fill their tanks, as it takes so long, they hold up the line. Probably not something you think about when installing an R/O system.
1999 Prevost H3-45
Gary@BusConversionMagazine.com

Jim Blackwood

I would never consider filtering the water at the fill connection with RO, that is just wasteful. The RO is for drinking water exclusively and there's a separate tap for that. A system large enough to handle all the water would be huge and extremely expensive. A particulate/charcoal filter on the fill line might be a good idea if local water sources are bad but that could be a separate unit that gets connected as needed. I know some places in south Florida have sulfur water and a shower in that stuff isn't all that pleasant. If I was dealing with that I'd be inclined to filter the incoming water but not with RO. Any filter is going to slow the fill rate somewhat.

Jim
I saw it on the Internet. It MUST be true...

Gary Hatt - Publisher BCM

Quote from: Jim Blackwood on May 15, 2025, 06:24:57 AM
I would never consider filtering the water at the fill connection with RO, that is just wasteful. The RO is for drinking water exclusively and there's a separate tap for that. A system large enough to handle all the water would be huge and extremely expensive. A particulate/charcoal filter on the fill line might be a good idea if local water sources are bad but that could be a separate unit that gets connected as needed. I know some places in south Florida have sulfur water and a shower in that stuff isn't all that pleasant. If I was dealing with that I'd be inclined to filter the incoming water but not with RO. Any filter is going to slow the fill rate somewhat.

Jim

I agree. R/O is the ultimate filtering solution, but they sure do take up a lot of space in a bus.  ;D
1999 Prevost H3-45
Gary@BusConversionMagazine.com

Jim Blackwood

I saw it on the Internet. It MUST be true...