active network: BikeMagic : Golfmagic : OutdoorsMagic : RCUK : Visordown  
Welcome to OUTDOORSmagic
Forgot your password?
Have an account?
  •  
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Blogs
  • Features
  • Gallery
  • Routes
  • Forum
  • Shop
  • Ask Us
Join  
RSS  
Advertise  
Blog  
Outdoors News  
Gear News  
Travel News  
Jackets  
Other Clothing  
Footwear  
Packs  
Tents  
Sleeping  
Other Equipment  
Gear News  
Buy online  
Classifieds  
Local shops  
Forum  
Outdoor News Blog  
Editorial musings  
Gear Blog  
Thoughts from the Outdoors  
Outdoor Features  
Hill skills  
Health and fitness  
Travel features  
Gear features  
Add image  
Latest images  
OM Members' album  
All albums  
Front page  
User guide  
Gallery Forum  
Walking  
Scrambling  
Meets and Partners forum  
Search routes  
Map a route  
Routes forum  
Latest Posts  
New discussions  
Hot Threads  
Trip Reports  
New Member Introductions  
Soapbox  
Walking and Climbing  
Gear  
Meets and Partners  
Starting out?  
Travel  
Lakeland 100 Chat  
tgo magazine live letters archive  
Gallery  
GPS help and advice  
Classifieds Section  
Online Shopping  
Second Hand  
Local Shops  
Ask a gear question  
See gear answers  
Forum
You are looking at: Home : Forum :

Gear

Which water filter, please?
 
Latest Posts | New Discussions | Hot Threads | Forum TopicsHelp | Settings | Public Profile
 Search forum: 
Which water filter, please?
spacer image
1 to 20 of 37 messagesPage: 1  2  
spacer image
 
Show/hide user stats
Geoffrey Neill
14/07/03 08:58
 Rookie 725 forum posts 6 photos 1 article 1 review 1 bookmark
I want to buy a good water filter for backpacking with. What is a better buy, the MSR Miniworks at £80 or the MSR Waterworks at £140?

I was thinking of treating my water by sticking it in a bottle with some iodine for 30 minutes first and then filtering it. Would that work and would it get rid of the iodine?
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Ninja Marmot
14/07/03 10:55
 Rookie 33592 forum posts 71 photos 3 articles 18 reviews
I use chlorine tabs and use a Vit C tab to kill the taste. I hate the tate of Cl but it does work.
Iodine isn't reconmmended long-term and in Britain Cl is adequate.

HTH
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Jon Doran (OM Editor)
14/07/03 11:23
 Rookie 9677 forum posts 60 photos 5779 articles 10 reviews 14 bookmarks
Geoffrey, yep, the iodine would work either before or after filtering - the length of time you need to leave it and the quantity of iodine you need to use depends on the temperature of the water btw, I like the re-useable iodine crystals you can buy in a small glass bottle.

The iodine will kill viruses that the purifier might not be able to cope with. I don't know whether the filter will totally eliminate the iodine taste, MSR says it removes iodine, so presumably most would go, but using a small pinch of vitamin C powder after treatment converts the iodine to iodide which is tasteless, so it shouldn't be an issue. Those 'neutralising tablets' you can buy, btw, are simply asorbic acid, aka vitamin C...

If you're just using iodine for a few weeks at a time, I wouldn't worry. Months on end yes, but not just for occasional use. As for which one to go for, depends I think on how much you intend to use them. I think the Waterworks filters slightly faster and has an additional membrane filter that may technically remove finer particles, but I don't know if there are any differences in filter life.
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Darren Wheeler
14/07/03 12:33
 Rookie 3940 forum posts 8 photos 18 reviews 1 bookmark
With the Iodine, it's important to check with your doctor if you plan to use long term, especially if there is any history of Thyroid problems in the family. For that reason I can't use it.
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Geoffrey Neill
14/07/03 13:05
 Rookie 725 forum posts 6 photos 1 article 1 review 1 bookmark
That was one of my questions. If I use iodine FIRST then filter the water, will the filter remove the iodine? Does anyone know?

I think it does but I'd like the reassurance! :-)

The Miniworks and the Waterworks are very similar. They both filter at the same rate (1 litre per minute for the new EX ones identifiable by their red plastic case instead of the older one's blue plastic) and use cermaic filters rated to 0.3 micron. These filters cost about £30 for new ones. The big difference with the Waterworks is the addition of a membrane filter which filters down to 0.2 microns. This membrane filter costs a bank busting £60 to replace.

Since the Waterworks cost 75% more to buy and £90 to replace the filters, I've gone and bought a Miniworks. I bought one from a guy in America for just £35 + £11 insured delivery. I just hope it gets through customs ok!
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Gregory Cain
06/06/07 18:59
 Rookie 1850 forum posts 38 photos 23 reviews
Just out of interest, do these water filters work on salt water? Will it make salt water drinkable?
 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Gneiss Boots
06/06/07 19:34
Geoffrey N

I can't answer your specific question about how well iodine will be removed by the filter but depending on what country you are using the filter in, and what the threat is of illness, I understand that the iodine will be less effective in unfiltered water. In essence the ions spend lots of time attacking the silt / bits of wood or whatever has yet to be filtered out (and of course these things can have 'bugs' within them) and not purifying the water. A simplistic explanation for what is probably a very complex chemical process I guess - the advice is usually to filter then purify.

Gregory

No - salt is in solution. You have to distill it out and condense the water.

Ben
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
al anon
06/06/07 20:49
 Rookie 465 forum posts 4 photos 7 classifieds
Might you consider looking at something small, light and disposable? The premac pocket filter gives 60 litres of clean water. I have no idea about filtering out the iodine but I think I recall that it filters as well as the Katadyn mini.
Sorry you will have to cut and paste:
http://www.bearclawbushcraft.co.uk/trading/cookware.htm
 Send to friend
Edited: 06/06/07 20:50
Show/hide user stats
The Doctor
06/06/07 21:13
 Rookie 618 forum posts 4 photos 2 bookmarks
I use an Aquapure Traveller bottle

http://www.homehealth-uk.com/medical/aquatraveller.htm
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
John Howell 2
23/08/07 07:48
 Rookie

Forget the UK - high street prices on filters are crazy (Cotswold breaking £200 at the top end). As well as US, EU countries can be cheap, staff also speak English (Holland, Germany, Scanadanavia..) and there's no VAT/customs. www.Strikeforceforcesupplies.com (?) in Bath does Millbanks bags (good prefilter) and sterilser/neutraliser for +/- £18: cheapest I've seen.

Lots of aspirational and confusion marketing in this sector so be precise about your needs. Unless you are on the margins of weight, filtering a large amount of water twice a day is better than relying on lots of little stops and forced deviations for a small drink. You might also need water in hotels en route to your favourite wilderness, when weight is less of a problem, so all in all gravity/syphon systems are well worth consideration.

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Red Tent
23/08/07 08:56
 Rookie 125 forum posts

Don't get a filter, or iodine, or any other form of mechanical/chemical purification. Get a Steripen instead. It will kill everything in a litre of water in a minute and a half, without altering the flavour (well, it actually neutralises DNA so that bugs can't multiply, but the effect is the same). The only filtering you will need to do is to remove any visible 'bits' from the water (if there are any), which you can do by simply pouring it through a piece of microfibre cloth - such as a buff or a piece of microfibre towel - before zapping it with the Steripen.

Seriously, getting one of these instead of a filter etc was one of the best kit decisions we made; it is so quick and easy to use, once I'd found it I couldn't - and still can't - see why on earth you'd want to use anything else.

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Stephen Graham
23/08/07 09:00
 Rookie 325 forum posts 17 photos 3 reviews
I picked up an unused Katadyn Hiker cheap from Ebay and I've found that works well. I can't comment about it's filtering effectiveness except to say that I've never gotten ill on a trip and the water produced tastes fine. Functionaly it's very easy to use and the delivery rate for filtered water is pretty good - better than I'd expected.
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
John Burley
23/08/07 10:06
 Rookie 4933 forum posts 113 photos 33 reviews 22 bookmarks

Some ideas:

Steripen - sounds fantastic, especially if combined with a Millbank bag or similar. I intend to get one eventually.

MiOX - popular in the US, especially with their Mountain Rescue medics such as Keith Conver (see his very helpful pdf ).

Tablets : Micropur (by Katadyn but available at Boots ) uses silver ions to sterilise water, no bad taste, lasts for 10+ years and is very very light. I carry these in my washbag whenever I travel.

As for treating salt water, the above filters cannot remove sea salt. However, there are ways of doing so without distillation that Ben mentioned. You can get reverse osmosis pump filters. They are very expensive even for a basic model and require a lot of manual (or motor driven) effort for a small amount of water. They are part of a decent ocean survival kit to be found in a well-equipped lift raft, but not a great idea for your average hiker! 

 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Owen Bennett
23/08/07 23:04
  I dont use a filter use Aquamira ,two little bottles to mix no aftertaste kills all the bugs.Cotswold Outdoors stock this
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Phil Saben
06/04/08 02:09
 Rookie 2 forum posts 2 reviews
reverse osmosis filters are available at "screwfix" in the uk at a very reasonable price. About £300. 00 Then you just need 240 volts at 10 amps to power it !!
 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Glyn
06/04/08 07:58

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
rogerb
06/04/08 09:57
 Rookie 36 forum posts 13 photos
I pre filter with an MSR coffee filter and then use a steripen adventurer. Just make sure you use a wide mouth container for the steripen as the uv tube needs to be immersed in the water for it to operate.






 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Trevor D Gamble
07/04/08 03:17
 Rookie 18330 forum posts 1 review 2408 bookmarks

http://www.safariquip.co.uk/travel_advice_water_treatment.html

Some more good water purification lore at this site here for travellers abroad!

 Send to friend
Edited: 07/04/08 03:17
Show/hide user stats
Bob C - backpackinglight.co.uk
07/04/08 19:38
 Rookie 1315 forum posts 14 photos 1 article 1 review 1 bookmark

If you can hold your horses for a few days I've got a new system which has just passed all the tests with flying colours and is about to launch!

It does purification AND filtration and I can vouch for it's simplicity, lightness,  simple use and effectiveness as I've been drinking out of rivers, which I wouldn't normally touch with a barge pole.

It comes looking like a simple water bottle, and if you are warried about the water in a disaster area, you can add an iodine or chlorine tablet. Thankfully the system reduces all the tastes and makes pure and clean instantly.

Good for 400 gallons plus (depending on how you use it) price £30! 

I may have a couple available for review if anyone wants to try it. Please email me directly. 

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Bigbananafeet
08/04/08 09:56
 Rookie 2028 forum posts 123 photos 8 reviews 5 bookmarks
Horses held Bob!
 Send to friend
 
1 to 20 of 37 messages

Page: 1  2  


Change stats view
spacer image
bookmarkMake external bookmarkAdd to My Bookmarks

« Previous thread   -   Next thread »
spacer image
Forum jump  
Spacer image
Sign up to our weekly newsletter
Shopping
www.e-outdoor.co.uk
Cave and Crag
Fox's Outdoor
Trekmates
Outdoor Megastore
The Outdoor Shop
Ellis Brigham Mountain Sports
Springfield Camping
Park Cameras
Latest on the site
New Review: Haglöfs Ambo Long Shorts
Latest OM site review is the new Haglöfs Ambo Shorts, long, loose and ace for summer.
Friday Matinee - Biking Special
Watch the entire new Anthills film Strength In Numbers for free, but you need to be quick.
Weekend Mountain Weather Outlook
OM's unexpurgated interpretation of this weekend's mountain weather and...
  • Cool Summits Everest Again With Medal
  • 'Everest Like An Amusement Park' - Moro
Competitions

Win a Berghaus Mount Asgard Smock
OutdoorsMagic and SportPursuit have teamed up to offer members the chance to win a smock worth £220
Win a Leatherman Rebar multi-tools
Whitby & Co are offering you the chance to win 1 of 6 multi-tools worth £59.95
Win Scarpa Mojito shoes
Scarpa and Cotswold Outdoor have teamed up and have 3 pairs up for grabs
Sign up to our twitter feed
Promotions

10% Discount On Columbia Products
During May you can try Columbia for less
New to Cotswold Outdoor
Rab Microlight Alpine Jackets for men and women
Dog day afternoons
Activities for you and your dog courtesy of Sainsbury's Finance
Facebook

Become a fan of OutdoorsMagic

Twitter

Follow us on twitter

Newsletter

Sign up to our free newsletter

Meet some partners

Meet partners in our forum

Parenting

  • Junior
  • Practical Parenting
  • MadeForMums

Other Immediate Media Sites

  • RadioTimes
  • Gardeners' World
  • GOLFmagic
  • OUTDOORSmagic
  • Visordown

Our eCommerce Platform

About OutdoorsMagic

  • About us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & conditions
  • Support
  • Advertise with us

Forums

  • Trip Reports
  • New Member Introductions
  • Soapbox
  • Walking and Climbing
  • Gear
  • Meets and Partners
  • Starting out?
  • Travel
  • Lakeland 100 Chat
  • tgo magazine live letters archive
  • Gallery
  • GPS help and advice
  • Classifieds Section

Reviews

  • Jackets
  • Other Clothing
  • Footwear
  • Packs
  • Tents
  • Sleeping
  • Other Equipment

Home

  • Join OutdoorsMagic
  • Advertise with us
  • Take our articles (RSS)

News

Blogs

Features

Gallery

Routes

Shop

Ask Us

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms + conditions
  • Advertise with us

© Immediate Media Company Ltd 2011. This website is owned and published by Immediate Media Company Limited. www.immediatemedia.co.uk