Author Topic: ? regarding water storage  (Read 772 times)

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Offline res2cue

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? regarding water storage
« on: August 23, 2009, 03:30:56 AM »
I have been a reader/lurker here for awhile and have gotten a lot of great info, Thanks to all who contribute!
I have 4 of these that I have filled using my "Pur" water filter system that is attached to the faucet.

My first question is "How often should I change out the water" These are kept filled in my cellar and are up off the concrete floor. Direction said to freshen inside by rinsing with baking soda.
I do keep a quart of bleach and iodine pills in my supplies just in case.

Also I have a 15gal "Blue barrel" that my liquid chlorine( which is just bleach, correct) came in for the pool. It has not had any liquid in in for over a year, If I wash it out and use a baking soda solution can I used this to store drinking water in?

Thanks again for all the input!
 
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Offline ShadowMover

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Re: ? regarding water storage
« Reply #1 on: August 25, 2009, 10:07:41 AM »
Check the manufacturer's MSDS (Material Data safety Sheet) using Google, for what the 'liquid chlorine' actually contained. It could be anything from sodium hypo-chlorite solution 5.75% which is the same as washing machine bleach, to some other exotic stuff like chlorine dioxide solution used in disinfecting food processing machinery.  As a rule most of the stuff will wash out and be good, but you can also get some reactions between the plastic and high chlorine compounds that will form chlorinated hydrocarbons , chloroform for example, that will be toxic to your body when ingested.  As a rule try to minimize any chlorinated hydrocarbons. You might safely use water containing them to wash your hands. I would prefer water that wasn't exposed to chlorinated hydrocarbons for drinking.  On the other hand most city water systems use chlorine to disinfect their water, and there is a detectable amount left over, which keeps the bacteria level low.

To sum it up, I'd use a plastic container that had contained chlorine dioxide solution, or sodium hypo-chlorite solution, as an emergency water container.  Don't use it if it smells funny. Rinse, fill, wait, dump, refill.  Dump the water a few times.

Has anyone had any experience using ultraviolet light to disinfect water?  I saw a UV light set up that was supposed to kill bacteria after a short use. I have also read about set ups that are installed in aquariums that will kill bacteria.

Offline Arier Blut

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Re: ? regarding water storage
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2009, 03:17:43 AM »
I have a uv purifier that looks like a pen. It makes creek water taste flavorless, so I am assuming it works. I tried a sip of the water before and it tasted good like most of us drank as kids from a good well or cold creek. After it had no flavor, just flat. It was a limestone lined creek and it even took out that taste. Sorry I don't have any more info than that. I researched the straw filters and they didn't last any time so I went with the uv.

As for storage I don't really know. I dump out every summer to water the garden. So it is stored a year and still good. I use black containers so the light won't penetrate. Supposedly blue lets light in and lets the algae grow. Mine are outside though, and yours in the cellar so it probably doesn't matter.

I have iodine tablets as well. Some folks say they hurt the kidneys or liver, can't remember. Just in case I only plan on using them as a last resort. Your bleach should treat a whole lot of water though, so no big deal.
Good Luck

Offline The Hermit

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Re: ? regarding water storage
« Reply #3 on: October 24, 2009, 12:02:59 PM »
One of my cabins is a trappers cabin. I take 1/2 gal plastic milk bottles(cleaned) and filled to within 3 inches from the top. This allows for expansion from freezing. I put 1 drop of bleach in it. When I get to my cabin in sub freezing temps I just take a bottle and set it next to the stove. In a short while, the ice has melted and I can make coffee. I have used water that was several years old and it tastes the same as fresh. I'm sure your methods will work fine too. Also, you will be surprised at how much water you use only after you have to pack it in.


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Offline teddy12b

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Re: ? regarding water storage
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2009, 10:38:42 AM »
Since your water is purified when you put it in the container you should be good for 6 months to a year I would think.

If you want to be ready to add a huge amount of water storage in short order I would recommend a waterbob to supplement what you already have.

http://www.waterbob.com/Welcome.do;jsessionid=BEC0F9E88579E8BB6B1F3063B15DE2FB

It's $20 and holds 100 gallons of water in your tub withoutthe water beign exposed to a dirty bathtub.  I bought one just in case figuring I could always just run that water through my filter if I needed to.