Current Events > Aquafina is still the best water

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Smackems
08/22/21 11:09:23 PM
#1:


Come at me

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Heartomaton
08/22/21 11:11:28 PM
#2:


I just buy Great Value. Most bottles for the dollar.

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Smackems
08/22/21 11:13:53 PM
#3:


Heartomaton posted...
I just buy Great Value. Most bottles for the dollar.
Tastes like Clorox though

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Heartomaton
08/22/21 11:15:40 PM
#4:


Smackems posted...
Tastes like Clorox though

I don't drink it straight. Never straight.

I use individual bottled water flavor packets.

Also Great Value.

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Another_Voice
08/22/21 11:16:11 PM
#5:


A few facts about the life cycle of water that should be on everyones radar. It takes approximately 3 years for water to go from a spring to your point of consumption.

The amount of time that water is in the ground also plays a role. The water should not be treated to remove iron or fluoride, since the benefits are greatly over-powered by the long-term negative health effects from that treatment.

Many would argue that high quality water, such as that bottled in high altitude locations like Austria or Chile, comes from the clear water at great depths, where pressure forces the water into high pressure chambers, leaving behind crystal clear water. I have no idea what this process involves, but its seems strange that something so clear must be forced to form at pressures so high. To help us understand what this entails, here is a summary of how water makes it from the earth to our bottles.

It begins with water that is naturally rich in certain mineral and isotopic signatures. These inclusions are the raw materials used to make glass. Glass is not a homogenous material, rather it is made up of small crystal grains that are surrounded by a matrix of less homogenous material. As the water flows through the molten glass, the crystal grains are pushed down into the matrix where they remain while most of the other less homogenous material is forced upwards. The molten glass then cools, contracting around the crystals and forming a glass block. The result is a hard glass object in which the glass remains relatively homogenous.
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Smackems
08/22/21 11:18:09 PM
#6:


Another_Voice posted...
A few facts about the life cycle of water that should be on everyones radar. It takes approximately 3 years for water to go from a spring to your point of consumption.

The amount of time that water is in the ground also plays a role. The water should not be treated to remove iron or fluoride, since the benefits are greatly over-powered by the long-term negative health effects from that treatment.

Many would argue that high quality water, such as that bottled in high altitude locations like Austria or Chile, comes from the clear water at great depths, where pressure forces the water into high pressure chambers, leaving behind crystal clear water. I have no idea what this process involves, but its seems strange that something so clear must be forced to form at pressures so high. To help us understand what this entails, here is a summary of how water makes it from the earth to our bottles.

It begins with water that is naturally rich in certain mineral and isotopic signatures. These inclusions are the raw materials used to make glass. Glass is not a homogenous material, rather it is made up of small crystal grains that are surrounded by a matrix of less homogenous material. As the water flows through the molten glass, the crystal grains are pushed down into the matrix where they remain while most of the other less homogenous material is forced upwards. The molten glass then cools, contracting around the crystals and forming a glass block. The result is a hard glass object in which the glass remains relatively homogenous.
Tldr Aquafina da bestest

Heartomaton posted...
I don't drink it straight. Never straight.

I use individual bottled water flavor packets.

Also Great Value.
Great value drinky things are pretty good. Wanna know the best great value thingy? Their brownie mix. Less than a dollar a box and I swear it's the best brownie mix ever concocted

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Kombucha
08/22/21 11:20:40 PM
#7:


Heartomaton posted...
I don't drink it straight. Never straight.

I use individual bottled water flavor packets.

Also Great Value.

I always get these, but the ones with caffeine in them.

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BroodRyu
08/22/21 11:23:05 PM
#8:


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Smackems
08/22/21 11:24:46 PM
#9:


Kombucha posted...
I always get these, but the ones with caffeine in them.
Assuming you're talking about the drinky things, those are too much for me. I tend to chug caffeine and those things kinda have a lot in them. I'd end up dead before long lol

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