| I'm looking at that limescale filter pictured: and I don't think it helps with hard water at all. It looks like the point of the limescale filter in the picture is for keeping the limescale IN the kettle, and preventing chunks of limescale from pouring out of the kettle and into your teacups. Anything else, it'd be utterly useless for. A tiny metal mesh won't do anything to pull limescale out of hard water. For that, you need Reverse Osmosis and/or demineralizer. Much larger activated carbon-filters (aka: Brita) barely helps with hard water in my experience (and Youtube tests suggest it doesn't change ppm counts much at all). (Brita clearly makes a different taste: so its filtering something out of the water. But its just not limestone / scale / the stuff that makes hard water) ---------- Descaling with vinegar (or citric acid tablets, or some other acid) seems to be the easiest solution, short of a more expensive, dedicated filter (like Reverse Osmosis). You're just not going to soften hard water with a reusable mesh. That's just not how hard water works. ------- IMO: That's why we don't see limescale filters on electric kettles. Physics / chemistry simply doesn't work the way the parent post expects. |
That's the point, yes. You have tea with lime flakes otherwise.
As for filters I actually prefer the taste of hard water (and the tap water is good to drink where I live, just inconvenient).
As for kettles - most people where I live use the ones you put on your gas stove as electricity is more expansive.