What an incredible product, I had no idea this technology at this size and weight existed. And great video. Shows all the detail you need and want, with intelligent and clear narration. This is the first of your videos I've seen, and I've just subscribed 👍
These are pretty amazing, the non potable water side confused me at first because it came out faster than the potable side so i figured it was messed up but once i got it working it was amazing water, you are right, its super clean water!
Amazing review. The price has shot up to $850. 😔🤯 How many gallons have you gotten thru it this far? Also how much does it weigh? If they are able to make one half the size I could take it on my long term backpack expeditions. I'm looking for a compact manual one for sea water for backpacking exploration. If someone can make one of these half to a third of the size they'll be a multimillionaire for the backpacking community. This is a game changer for ocean surfers and fisherman.
They have desalinators but the technology is a little expensive because of it being so small. They have them for boating Industry. Yes, the price is worth your health / life.
Dissolved heavy metals and chemicals are the big one. If you're in an area where human/chemical pollution is a concern ie near urban centres, you want this and not the Sawyer. If you're in the wilderness where bacteria and viruses and parasites are the concern, then the Sawyer will do. This technology is incredible in such a small lightweight size.
The Reverse Osmosis Water Purification System is built around a RO membrane, The pores in a reverse osmosis membrane are only approximately 0.0005 micron in size. Viruses and bacteria a much bigger in size.This allows water molecules to travel through the RO membrane while heavy metals dissolved salts, foreign matter, bacteria, viruses, and other contaminants are blocked. You can't say that about the Sawyer or most water filters. One Hospital visit from excruciating Stomach Pain makes The R.O. System worth every penny.
ro filtration is exactly the system for salt ocean water! this is not a ro filter, if it doesn't take out dissolved salts! admittedly, ocean water is very salty, but maybe a second, third pass will eventually do the job. desalination is RO filtering! boats use multiple RO cartridges and purify the sea water to perfection! 2 in series should do it, you need a nice strong pump, to put some pressure on the membrane.
Incorrect. Reverse osmosis systems do not get rid of salt water. Only those specifically designed to desalinate will do that. Those on boats are made to desalinate sea water.
The little beauties in the background are absolutely gorgeous. That technology is the best you could buy. The Reverse Osmosis Water Purification System is built around a RO membrane. The average pore size of reverse osmosis membranes is 0.001 to 0.0001 microns. The size of the pores depends on the design of the membrane and the materials used. RO membranes with the smallest pore size have a contaminant rejection rate of up to 99%. Viruses and bacteria are much bigger in size.This allows water molecules to travel through the RO membrane while heavy metals, dissolved salts, foreign matter, bacteria, viruses, and other contaminants are blocked. You can't say that about most water filters. *One Hospital visit from excruciating Stomach Pain maybe costing you thousands of dollars makes The R.O. System worth every penny. Those with experience never argue with the liberal foolish.*
Bummer that it will not remove salt from seawater. Also, they need to stop making all these things ELECTRICITY powered, and give us a pedal powered RO system! I'd ride a "bike" for an hour every day to get a couple of gallons of fresh water from the ocean.
99% of people using a portable filter like this. Aren't stuck out in sea. So no person is gonna use a basic filter to filter sea water with a standard filter. Not even cheap filtering systems like lifestraw do that. You need a different system for that. But lucky they do make them supposedly if you read the other comments you'll see but it's a desalination system. Which i believe boils the water in a sense to split the water and salt from eachother to exchange the water in it's own form away from the salt. Though even then you'll STILL be required to use a alkaline filter system or so to put minerals back into the 'Distilled' water due to the fact drinking just pure H2O without any minerals is bad. Since your body relies off using the water minerals More then just the water itself. You might as well be spongebob 'filter feeding' air if you just drunk distilled water because that is basically air in water form in a sense. Also i seen a 'cheaper' Handpump currently on Amazon with a RO filter cartridge going for around 70-80$ FS-TFC RO Portable Water Filter. But reason most want a electric power. Is due to the fact it's easier to just push and let it fill. I don't think you can 'Bike' and filter water. Cause biking you're 'moving' around. These need to be stationary at the location spot to filter the water. So it's either a basic Pump system or Electric for easier filling. Most like the Electric versions since this lets them fill larger jugs like GALLON SIZE type with little effort to filling. Unlike the handpumps that are more for quick pitstops and filling a waterbottle size system. (Oh didn't notice you mean 'Water bike'. Thought you were talking about land biking. But i guess that makes sense on your idea of water biking. Maybe you could fit a generator to the wheel. I seen people use electric motors jerryrigged to the seatpost or frame to sit on the wheel and as that rolls it powers 12volt.) Plus if you're a portable camper or supposed Off-grid/Stealth liver. These things just make more sense to go electrical power for quicker filling and recharging. Picture a whole kitchen just used based on one of these little things. Instead of a foot pump or hand pump. Super easier to use then pumping by hand/foot.
@@TheRealPaul_MorphyHere's a funny fact. If your theory was 'True' Then that'd make all filters redundent to filter lead. And i mean AAAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLL. Because Survival straw and this ITEHIL use a Hollow membrane filter that's supposed to capture things To. Not just filter via Charcoal. So are you telling me only RO supposedly could remove/stop lead from entering now? Lol you don't know what your talking about. Do some research. Brita/PUR are two of the top companies making home water purifiers to remove most home stuff. Lead being one of them. Both using thick heavy Charcoal filters that are 20x the size of a survival straw or any 'portable' filter. Though maybe not this hybrid and RO unit in the filter. But you get the idea.
@@TheRealPaul_Morphy They never said 'remove' fully. They said 'REDUCE'. Learn to read. But yes they do remove/reduce ALOT. If none did then that'd be for every filter on the market. So if you're so scared of LEAD. Then i wouldn't touch that thing your using. It might contain lead and you might not know it! UH OH! Even in your meat, Or you fruit and veggies! QUICK get the UV blacklight and go LEAD sniffing!
@KillerRaptorr Calm down kid. If you were paying attention to what I typed, you'd notice that I didn't use quotation marks. I'm making a statement separate from what was previously said, and that statement is: charcoal based filters, like the survival straw, doesn't remove lead.
What an incredible product, I had no idea this technology at this size and weight existed. And great video. Shows all the detail you need and want, with intelligent and clear narration. This is the first of your videos I've seen, and I've just subscribed 👍
I appreciate that! Thank you! Yes I’m very surprised by this reverse osmosis system in such a compact size. It’s amazing.
These are pretty amazing, the non potable water side confused me at first because it came out faster than the potable side so i figured it was messed up but once i got it working it was amazing water, you are right, its super clean water!
Yeah I had to read up on that cause it confused me at first too! But I totally agree. What a great system!
Amazing review. The price has shot up to $850. 😔🤯 How many gallons have you gotten thru it this far? Also how much does it weigh? If they are able to make one half the size I could take it on my long term backpack expeditions. I'm looking for a compact manual one for sea water for backpacking exploration. If someone can make one of these half to a third of the size they'll be a multimillionaire for the backpacking community. This is a game changer for ocean surfers and fisherman.
They have desalinators but the technology is a little expensive because of it being so small. They have them for boating Industry. Yes, the price is worth your health / life.
@@billbbobby2889 who are "they"? Links please! ;-)
Ooh that sounds like a cool piece of kit!
It’s so amazing. I’m very impressed with it.
How does the purification capabilities of the reverse osmosis purifier compare to a distiller?
Distiller in the wild ?
Not a good idea.
Thanks Morgan - shared for you - think it looks great
Pretty great system for sure. Thanks!
Does it do salt water?
No. Only desalination systems do that.
Is there any USB port to charge it or it use a gigantic charging cord.?
Can charge via wall and solar
Wow very nice. Thanks for sharing and have a great day or 🌃. Much love.
Thank you
Really cool idea
Yeah it’s very cool, love it.
Very interesting Mogan. Thanknyou.
Thanks!
Salut
Est ce que sa fonctionne pour l'eau de mer (eau salée) ?
No. If you want to desalinate seawater, you’ll be paying several hundred if not thousands of dollars.
This is lovely
What advantages does this have over a Sawyer filter?
Dissolved heavy metals and chemicals are the big one. If you're in an area where human/chemical pollution is a concern ie near urban centres, you want this and not the Sawyer. If you're in the wilderness where bacteria and viruses and parasites are the concern, then the Sawyer will do. This technology is incredible in such a small lightweight size.
@bushcraftingmuslim yes, what you said! 💪
The Reverse Osmosis Water Purification System is built around a RO membrane, The pores in a reverse osmosis membrane are only approximately 0.0005 micron in size. Viruses and bacteria a much bigger in size.This allows water molecules to travel through the RO membrane while heavy metals dissolved salts, foreign matter, bacteria, viruses, and other contaminants are blocked.
You can't say that about the Sawyer or most water filters.
One Hospital visit from excruciating Stomach Pain makes The R.O. System worth every penny.
looks like a good one
Very cool
Thanks!
That is very cool.
Yeah it’s pretty great
Are you still using this? How is the holding up for you?
I still have it. Works great.
@@RoguePreparedness Thanks for getting back to me quickly.
Definitely worth it. I love it.
@@RoguePreparedness I read on their website not to use it all the time, and it is only for emergencies. How are you using yours?
ro filtration is exactly the system for salt ocean water! this is not a ro filter, if it doesn't take out dissolved salts! admittedly, ocean water is very salty, but maybe a second, third pass will eventually do the job. desalination is RO filtering! boats use multiple RO cartridges and purify the sea water to perfection! 2 in series should do it, you need a nice strong pump, to put some pressure on the membrane.
Incorrect. Reverse osmosis systems do not get rid of salt water. Only those specifically designed to desalinate will do that. Those on boats are made to desalinate sea water.
Replacement filters are 70% the cost of a whole unit. Hmmmm....
The little beauties in the background are absolutely gorgeous. That technology is the best you could buy. The Reverse Osmosis Water Purification System is built around a RO membrane. The average pore size of reverse osmosis membranes is 0.001 to 0.0001 microns. The size of the pores depends on the design of the membrane and the materials used. RO membranes with the smallest pore size have a contaminant rejection rate of up to 99%. Viruses and bacteria are much bigger in size.This allows water molecules to travel through the RO membrane while heavy metals, dissolved salts, foreign matter, bacteria, viruses, and other contaminants are blocked.
You can't say that about most water filters.
*One Hospital visit from excruciating Stomach Pain maybe costing you thousands of dollars makes The R.O. System worth every penny. Those with experience never argue with the liberal foolish.*
👍👍
Discount code still work?
Yes!
Bummer that it will not remove salt from seawater. Also, they need to stop making all these things ELECTRICITY powered, and give us a pedal powered RO system! I'd ride a "bike" for an hour every day to get a couple of gallons of fresh water from the ocean.
99% of people using a portable filter like this. Aren't stuck out in sea. So no person is gonna use a basic filter to filter sea water with a standard filter. Not even cheap filtering systems like lifestraw do that. You need a different system for that. But lucky they do make them supposedly if you read the other comments you'll see but it's a desalination system. Which i believe boils the water in a sense to split the water and salt from eachother to exchange the water in it's own form away from the salt. Though even then you'll STILL be required to use a alkaline filter system or so to put minerals back into the 'Distilled' water due to the fact drinking just pure H2O without any minerals is bad. Since your body relies off using the water minerals More then just the water itself. You might as well be spongebob 'filter feeding' air if you just drunk distilled water because that is basically air in water form in a sense.
Also i seen a 'cheaper' Handpump currently on Amazon with a RO filter cartridge going for around 70-80$ FS-TFC RO Portable Water Filter.
But reason most want a electric power. Is due to the fact it's easier to just push and let it fill. I don't think you can 'Bike' and filter water. Cause biking you're 'moving' around. These need to be stationary at the location spot to filter the water. So it's either a basic Pump system or Electric for easier filling. Most like the Electric versions since this lets them fill larger jugs like GALLON SIZE type with little effort to filling. Unlike the handpumps that are more for quick pitstops and filling a waterbottle size system. (Oh didn't notice you mean 'Water bike'. Thought you were talking about land biking. But i guess that makes sense on your idea of water biking. Maybe you could fit a generator to the wheel. I seen people use electric motors jerryrigged to the seatpost or frame to sit on the wheel and as that rolls it powers 12volt.)
Plus if you're a portable camper or supposed Off-grid/Stealth liver. These things just make more sense to go electrical power for quicker filling and recharging. Picture a whole kitchen just used based on one of these little things. Instead of a foot pump or hand pump. Super easier to use then pumping by hand/foot.
@KillerRaptorr Fun fact, charcoal filters, like the survival straw, or brita filter, won't remove lead.
@@TheRealPaul_MorphyHere's a funny fact. If your theory was 'True' Then that'd make all filters redundent to filter lead. And i mean AAAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLL. Because Survival straw and this ITEHIL use a Hollow membrane filter that's supposed to capture things To. Not just filter via Charcoal.
So are you telling me only RO supposedly could remove/stop lead from entering now? Lol you don't know what your talking about. Do some research. Brita/PUR are two of the top companies making home water purifiers to remove most home stuff. Lead being one of them. Both using thick heavy Charcoal filters that are 20x the size of a survival straw or any 'portable' filter. Though maybe not this hybrid and RO unit in the filter. But you get the idea.
@@TheRealPaul_Morphy They never said 'remove' fully. They said 'REDUCE'. Learn to read. But yes they do remove/reduce ALOT. If none did then that'd be for every filter on the market.
So if you're so scared of LEAD. Then i wouldn't touch that thing your using. It might contain lead and you might not know it! UH OH! Even in your meat, Or you fruit and veggies! QUICK get the UV blacklight and go LEAD sniffing!
@KillerRaptorr Calm down kid. If you were paying attention to what I typed, you'd notice that I didn't use quotation marks. I'm making a statement separate from what was previously said, and that statement is: charcoal based filters, like the survival straw, doesn't remove lead.
Where is this useful? Why not just boil the water?
Do the make a desalination version? That would be a game changer.