this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2025
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[โ€“] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Anyone tried water purifying tablets yet, and would you recommend them?

They'll kill bacteria in water, though obviously they can't pull chemicals out of it.

I wouldn't be worried about bottled water going bad after a year


I've kept distilled water for much longer than that


but if you want more capacity in a smaller package than by storing water, you can get a water still, distill water yourself as long as you have some source of water and some sort of sufficient heat (e.g. a fire).

kagis

https://www.amazon.com/Roots-Branches-VKP1208-Little-Distiller/dp/B07WSJ2H8C

If you don't have access to a water source but have sufficient electrical power


which in the past I'd have said probably isn't very likely if the government can't get water to the public in 72 hours, but isn't as crazy as it once might have been, what with people running around with beefy home solar setups and the like


it's possible to run devices that condense water out of the air off the cold side of a heat pump, these sorts of things:

https://www.amazon.com/Solaris-WaterGen-A10-Atmospheric-Generator/dp/B0DL4N1PRG

I'd guess that for most people, the most-practical and cost-effective approach is probably just to estimate how much water one might need and store that much potable water in advance. That takes care of the "have a source of water", "get any energy required to purify it", and "purify it" points all at one go. Doesn't require a lot of expertise, effort, or place constraints on your environment to open a bottle of water.