JohnnyO
Moderator Emeritus
TRS Event Staff
Supporting Member
TRS 20th Anniversary
TRS Event Participant
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2002
- Messages
- 6,826
- City
- Pittsburgh
- State - Country
- PA - USA
- Vehicle Year
- 2020
- Vehicle
- Ford Ranger
- Drive
- 4WD
- Engine
- 2.3 EcoBoost
- Transmission
- Automatic
- Total Lift
- 1.5"
- Tire Size
- 265/70-17
- My credo
- "220, 221, whatever it takes."
Where I live most towns and cities get their water from rivers or underground rivers. The only folks with wells and septic live out in the country off the water and sewer lines.I actually researched this a TON (had to - paper for a health class I had to take in college even though I tested out past Bio 2 and my major was math)..... anyhow 30 years ago this was true so it might not be anymore, but mining tail-ings (like gold, silver, copper, lead mines from the 1850's-modern) contain all kinds of nastiness. They processed that stuff with acids and bases and they also just exposed tons of locked up minerals out on the surface... That crap goes into the water table and rivers ends up in the drinking water (stuff like antimony and zinc). At least in Colorado (a big mining state) the laws on 'acceptable levels' of a bunch of those are so low that what the sewer treatment plants expel is far far lower than what comes in to most people's drinking pipes. When I was researching I found that states like KY (coal), WV (coal), CA (gold) had as bad a problem if not worse, and of course by extension the states downstream of them in the river basin. Name a state and it has drinking water problems.
Most recently (in TX not more than 5 years ago) a buddy of mine worked for the water treatment plant for the city of Austin. He said repeatedly that bottled water was way worse than the drinking water (at least from Austin's pre-treatment plant) because there is no laws regulating bottled water and they just take that out of "clean" sources (like a Colorado spring up in the mountains).
Not to mention the BPA and other such toxic stuff that leaches out of the plastic that that water is bottled into.
The cleanest water (coming from him - they guy who worked for the City of Austin) was the water that big beer (think Coors for example) bottled to give to FEMA for emergency use. Those breweries use a reverse osmosis system before putting it into the beer/emergency canned water and monitor it as good or usually better than most cities.
Like I said, this could have changed and it could be way different - that was 30 years ago. But I can tell you the water I drink tastes horrific of Calcium (a big problem of eastern CO, we sit on a limestone plate...) Old wells draw from the shallow water above the plate - and taste like raw sewage. New wells draw from below it and taste like "hard water" cause that's what it is.
The quality of the water depends on the source though. Tap water at my house is fine but at my office the tap water is so horrible that it doesn't even make good coffee and we use bottled water in the coffeemaker.
The wife and I like to go on cruises and got a tour of the inner workings of the ship last year. They use reverse osmosis on the ships to filter the seawater and told us the tap water is better quality than most bottled water. Sewage is treated before being released into the ocean and food waste is kept separate and goes though a big garbage disposal before being released into the ocean to feed the fish.