A few weeks ago my boyfriend and I were sitting in front of the tube
when all of a sudden this extremely convincing commercial containing a
product called Zero Water had caught our attention. When the commercial ended, we both said 'whoa, we need one of those'.
So what is Zero Water?
Well yo don't really learn much from a 30 second commercial, but from
what we saw this pitcher is better than anything else out there. It will
filter your water leaving behind 0 contaminants, thus the name Zero
Water. It claims to be better than bottled water, better than other
filters on the market, and just better all around.
Yes we were sold, and the company so convinced that their product was
better they even included a water tester which will display the levels
of contaminants in the water.
Basically Zero Water delivers pure water, the way it should be, with no traces of anything bad left behind in the water.
The Zero Water Pitcher that we bought came to $34.99 at our local
Target. The box contains a nice blue transparent colored pitcher, it
also came with a filter, and a digital TDS meter.
The pitcher itself contains a spot on it to hold the TDS meter, and it
has a push button spout that will allow you to easily fill a cup with
water without having to remove the pitcher from your fridge. Oh yes,
there is no denying it, Zero Water is nifty, and convenient.
When we got the pitcher home we were very excited to see what the
level of TDS in our water (Total Dissolved Solids). We first tested our
tap water, and then our bottled water. The results were shocking really.
With bottled water we expected to see really, really clean water. I
mean hell, the stuff should have gotten a level of 0, but surprisingly
it was almost as bad as tap water. Wow! I guess Penn & Teller B.S
was right!
Anyhow our tap water got a reading of 57 TDS, and bottled water just 5 points lower at 52 TDS.
After getting high readings like this on our tap water, and our
bottled water we were thinking that the Zero Water's 5 stage ion
exchange filter wouldn't really filter the water to a 0 TDS level.
We filled the pitcher up with water, stuck in the TDS meter, and low
and behold, we were amazed to see the meter read a solid 0 all across
the digital tool. No way!?Oh yes, way!
Before us stood a glass of pure water in its purest form possible.
We wondered, how would it taste?
I took my first sip of pure water, Zero Water. The water was
spectacular, there were no odd plastic aftertastes, nor were there any
traces of chlorine, which I can detect in bottled water at times. Zero
Water was like refined goodness, the way fresh water probably once was
before we came to earth to contaminate it. Zero Water is pure, and
easily you can tell the difference if you side by side sip comparison to
regular tap water and bottled water.
Overall:
Zero Water in the long run delivers better water first and foremost,
but it will also save us a ton of money on bottled water. No longer do
we have to run out to restock, and no longer do we have to litter our
planet with wasteful plastic bottles.
Zero Water in my opinion will be the death of bottled water. This is a
pitcher that everyone should have, and I mean everyone. Pure water
which is safer for your family, safer for you, and safer for the planet.
I cannot recommend this one enough.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Leave a Comment