Testing The Lifestraw Under Microscope

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2024

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @whatsup968
    @whatsup968 2 года назад +2977

    That's incredible!
    Way better than any ad I've seen for Lifestraw that's for sure

    • @sayunasoulmesseng839
      @sayunasoulmesseng839 Год назад +5

      Can alsobe biased.

    • @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat
      @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat Год назад +117

      @@sayunasoulmesseng839 I highly doubt it, he even said it’s one of his most requested videos which makes sense due to the nature of the channel. But also biased opinions can still be the true opinion 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @kingmasterlord
      @kingmasterlord Год назад +7

      any _other_ ad*

    • @GodVanisher
      @GodVanisher Год назад +4

      @@BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeatThere are no “true” opinions.

    • @zebragoboom
      @zebragoboom Год назад +80

      ​@@GodVanisher I mean, this video isn't an opinion piece. not sure how filtering water through a straw and then looking at it under a microscope can be opinionated.

  • @leif6783
    @leif6783 2 года назад +4663

    I think it’d be cool to see what unfiltered ocean water looks like. Also that life straw works incredibly well.

    • @1GodExist
      @1GodExist 2 года назад +109

      That's an amazing idea... who's knows what's in our oceans now , after so many oil spills

    • @DesiD1989
      @DesiD1989 2 года назад +40

      I'm not sure where he lives but I live in Jacksonville Florida and could totally send him some! 😁

    • @leif6783
      @leif6783 2 года назад +12

      @@DesiD1989 That’d be really cool!

    • @kickboxerforever00
      @kickboxerforever00 Год назад +134

      Lifestraw doesn't Filter Salt, i.e Minerals, as they are too small and would pass through, same goes for Viruses

    • @brandonclark8395
      @brandonclark8395 Год назад +1

      Yep

  • @Zerzil1974
    @Zerzil1974 Год назад +469

    I have a Lifestraw and a Sawyer system, and every time I use them, it always crosses my mind about just how well they actually work. Thank you for this scientific view on it

    • @kevinloiselle9048
      @kevinloiselle9048 Год назад +1

      How many gallons are these good for?

    • @TimberwolfCY
      @TimberwolfCY Год назад +2

      @@kevinloiselle9048 Generally somewhere in the thousands, *with* proper maintenance and prep

    • @jeffr3773
      @jeffr3773 Год назад +4

      how do you clean and maintain them?

    • @jtoker9758
      @jtoker9758 Год назад +5

      You really should use the life straw or Sawyer to get the clean water, and then boil it to drank.

    • @stephanieyee9784
      @stephanieyee9784 Год назад

      ​@@jtoker9758, that's not what the Life Straw is designed for. It is for situations where you have no clean drinking water and nothing to heat it with.
      It really is an emergency back-up device for hikers, campers, etc.
      I have read that the Life Straw has been given to, and used by, some people in Africa who have no clean source of drinking water. Now that is a wonderful initiative.

  • @megamaser
    @megamaser Год назад +268

    I've used a similar product to drink gross stagnant water that was a darker brown color. I was a little nervous drinking it but it came out perfectly clear and had no taste. I survived off that water a couple days and never got sick. These filters are amazing.

  • @711jastin
    @711jastin Год назад +1047

    the fact that a 17$ small filter works better than some big filtration kits that sell a few folds more expensive is astounding.

  • @Sercil00
    @Sercil00 Год назад +1578

    I was afraid the filtered water would still have a lot of disgusting stuff left and you'd never want to use these filters, but this is actually quite impressive.

    • @zeebest1004
      @zeebest1004 Год назад +116

      I’d still boil the water first, if at all possible!

    • @chaoswraith
      @chaoswraith Год назад +241

      I dont think its intended for restraunts and designer drinking....more like emergency survival situations. Still very impressive

    • @BST-lm4po
      @BST-lm4po Год назад +107

      I wonder how many times (or gallons) you could filter before the filter starts clogging or allows bacteria to pass thru? 🤔

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 Год назад +45

      ​@@zeebest1004 When in doubt, boil that shi
      And not in plastic either please. Metal is the best way to go

    • @akirafan28
      @akirafan28 Год назад +44

      ​@@BST-lm4po I belive it's about 100L or 26,4 US gallons.

  • @Godsglory777
    @Godsglory777 Год назад +782

    Lifestraw needs to pay you for this as an advertisement for their product. That was amazing.

    • @Ragnarrage
      @Ragnarrage Год назад +34

      Something tells me they already did.

    • @ronweasly778
      @ronweasly778 Год назад +51

      @@Ragnarrage if they did, he would tell us in the video and deecription for viewers to purchase them. At least that's how sponsors work

    • @BloodyKnives66
      @BloodyKnives66 Год назад +16

      ​@Mr S he's the worst sponsor on earth then 😂 try it yourself been using one for camping for years. You really can drink out of a nasty creek with this thing

    • @NopeSecret
      @NopeSecret Год назад +1

      not really nothing new was demonstrated here

    • @InfoRanker
      @InfoRanker Год назад +7

      @@ronweasly778 There's a link for it in the description, which really makes the video lose all credibility.

  • @novaflame4812
    @novaflame4812 Год назад +548

    good to know life straws no gimmick, that it actually works to the point of filtering everything 100%, I agree, that bit of debris was more than likely from the pump itself, but I consider the test a success.

    • @ForbiddTV
      @ForbiddTV Год назад

      It doesn't filter everything 100%. T he LifeStraw will not filter a virus, and a virus is too small to be seen in that microscope setup.

    • @Livetoeat171
      @Livetoeat171 Год назад +8

      But, for how long or how many pumps

    • @stevop80_45
      @stevop80_45 Год назад +26

      @@Livetoeat171 In the video when he shows the packaging you can see some stats on the packaging @0:13. Lifetime capacity is 4,000 L or 1,000 gallons.

    • @eligebrown8998
      @eligebrown8998 Год назад +33

      ​@@Livetoeat171 maybe use it for only 3/4 of the usage recommended unless it's your only option and an emergency

    • @zidniafifamani2378
      @zidniafifamani2378 Год назад +5

      Yeah, but those detectable debris is probably far less than one you get from your tap water so it won't be a problem at most for a long time or won't be a problem at all.

  • @CloudfallGaming
    @CloudfallGaming Год назад +139

    I own a few lifestraws for emergency and although having done a little bit of checking in the past this visually demonstrated that I can trust them. Excellent vid, concise and to the point.

  • @PunakiviAddikti
    @PunakiviAddikti Год назад +101

    What you need for extracting liquids without contamination is a peristaltic pump. It's basically just a straight tube from end to end, nothing ever touches the liquid in the tube. The pump pinches the tube with rollers, which transfers liquid without physically touching it. They're used in medical applications and they can very accurately dispense a defined amount of liquid down to fractions of milliliters.

    • @AquaTech225
      @AquaTech225 Год назад +7

      It’s used for kidney dialysis ect. An different things in the hospital setting.
      Them pumps are also used for corrosive liquids since it don’t enter any working parts.

    • @PunakiviAddikti
      @PunakiviAddikti Год назад +4

      @@AquaTech225 Exactly. They're relatively easy to make or buy online.

    • @datalorian
      @datalorian Год назад

      This, also because you can just change the tube the pump could in theory last forever without becoming contaminated through different types of experiments.

    • @gblargg
      @gblargg Год назад +2

      Tube goes into jar, second tube comes from top and you have a normal pump that removes the air, thus pulling the liquid into it.

    • @PunakiviAddikti
      @PunakiviAddikti Год назад +2

      @@gblargg That's a very good idea, and cheap. You could also invert the system and pump air into the sealed liquid container, thus pushing liquid out.

  • @x5ilco
    @x5ilco Год назад +2174

    this guy is a real youtuber, short and to the point, he keeps my sub forever now

    • @vasiovasio
      @vasiovasio Год назад

      Yes! And no promoting NordVPN or Skillshare!

    • @tokensmusic
      @tokensmusic Год назад +21

      I don’t subscribe to things but the fact he keeps it short and to the point means he would be my first 😅

    • @door_productions4896
      @door_productions4896 Год назад +7

      @@tokensmusic Why not?

    • @did_I_hurt_your_fee_fees
      @did_I_hurt_your_fee_fees Год назад +29

      I know right. Most people would have made this a 10 minute video and just talked and talked to talked and talked about nothing important

    • @hullie7529
      @hullie7529 Год назад +11

      @@did_I_hurt_your_fee_fees RUclips is very obviously changing the algorithm to push shorter videos, maybe to compete with that Chinese app, but anyway, most content creators will catch up to this and those drawn out videos will soon stop being a thing.

  • @kickboxerforever00
    @kickboxerforever00 Год назад +379

    Lifestraw filters up to 0.2 microns, the Sawer Squeeze can filter down to 0.1 microns, you should give the Sawyer series a Test! 😊👍

    • @ForbiddTV
      @ForbiddTV Год назад

      Wouldn't make any difference. Viruses measure between .005 to .3 microns. None of them are safe for making surface water safe to drink.

    • @Pho7on
      @Pho7on Год назад +108

      Just in case you want to filter out medium sized proteins and long DNA strands? That's kinda insane.

    • @gdttdeggegdh5471
      @gdttdeggegdh5471 Год назад +45

      ​@@Pho7on and fun

    • @jspiro
      @jspiro Год назад +33

      That test won't be any better than this one. He will need a better lens.

    • @ROGER2095
      @ROGER2095 Год назад

      @@whendoesitend - You wouldn't be able to see a virus under a light microscope. BUT a virus generally exists inside living cells, and those you can see. No cells = high probability of no virus.

  • @bigbadradicalbrad8076
    @bigbadradicalbrad8076 Год назад +88

    Thank you for making this video to the point and not dragging it out for 10 minutes!! I loved it!

  • @coffeeandcream
    @coffeeandcream Год назад +80

    When I was young, whenever my mom would ask what I would like to receive for my birthday, I would say I want a microscope - a good microscope to see the kind of stuff this channel is posting. I was never given one, because we didn't have enough money for it (poor mom, she must be sad that she couldn't buy me one 😢). Until I just gave up on it.
    So watching the videos here makes me so happy! I feel excited everytime!

    • @alexcisneros2980
      @alexcisneros2980 Год назад +1

      Aww 😔❤️

    • @rick419
      @rick419 Год назад

      Why don't you just buy yourself a microscope?

    • @teenermeener971
      @teenermeener971 Год назад +1

      They are not the expensive now. Buy one.

    • @asmircar1
      @asmircar1 Год назад +1

      now when ur older u can help ur mom and pay for her massage or spa or hairsalon.... show her u apriciate her sacrifise and hard work.... its not easy raising kids in poverty.

    • @RobertSmith-km6gi
      @RobertSmith-km6gi Год назад +10

      Microscope, telescope, and chemistry set. I hounded my mom for years, my dad said no, but eventually mom won. We were poor but my mom understood the importance of learning. I’ll never forget my mom’s response when I showed her the rings of Saturn! Never stifle a child’s curiosity. The future rewards far outweigh the initial investment.

  • @barshak
    @barshak Год назад +13

    Thank you for being to the point and easy to understand. Some channels would drag this out to 20-30 minutes.

  • @vickiefowler1429
    @vickiefowler1429 Год назад +826

    That’s fairly impressive. I was expecting good results but that was way better than what I thought it would be.

    • @Katalinmason
      @Katalinmason Год назад +20

      I’ve used my lifestraw a couple of times. It’s truly an amazing bit of kit. I have a larger one for camping that has a pump on it that we use for dog water and cooking.

    • @francescaa8331
      @francescaa8331 Год назад +9

      That's what I thought. That thing does exactly what they say it does.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym Год назад +4

      @@Katalinmason you use it for your dog's water? Isn't that quite unnecessary as they seem to eat and drink what they get their paws on?

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Год назад +50

      ​@@ano_nym Dogs can get sick just like humans. Animals shouldn't drink stagnant water either.

    • @megarboh790
      @megarboh790 Год назад +22

      @@thespankmyfrank How dare for you to not feed your dog the worst possible swamp water you can get your hands on, absolutely disgusting

  • @heavywaternewsnetwork6641
    @heavywaternewsnetwork6641 Год назад +151

    i live in ottawa canada, and when i was made homeless for 5+ years i used the lifestraw in the forest to drink the ravine water. i never got sick . i'm glad to see this product holds up. thank you lifestraw and thank you for the video

    • @parakismu
      @parakismu Год назад +3

      Wait.. It really works for FIVE YEARS? How is this possible?

    • @chaoswraith
      @chaoswraith Год назад +7

      ​@@parakismu each straws filter is good for about 1000 gallons, but he most likely replaced his at some point

    • @nathantoews152
      @nathantoews152 Год назад +14

      @Chaoswraith did some quick crude math. But at 8 cups of water a day, which is the high side of what a person needs. If every sip of water a person drank was through the life straw and it is actually good to 1000 gallons. Then it should last just over 5 years.

    • @GrimrDirge
      @GrimrDirge Год назад +15

      Homeless in Ottawa sounds like a euphemism for being in hell.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад +2

      Thanks for the real life feedback.

  • @timothymarret2655
    @timothymarret2655 Год назад +257

    I think it would be cool to see the bacteria that grows and lands on a toothbrush that is just sitting in a bathroom. Maybe have a control, one that’s in a case, one in a medicine cabinet and one that’s open in a glass or holder on the bathroom sink in the open air…….. thanks! Great video!

    • @theabristlebroom4378
      @theabristlebroom4378 Год назад +13

      Mythbusters did this , although I admit, they didn't actually SHOW the stuff under the microscope.

    • @Nyx_2142
      @Nyx_2142 Год назад

      Fun fact, fecal matter from your toilet will be found on literally every surface in your house, regardless if you put the lid down or not. Putting the lid down just increases the velocity that the particles spray out at, similar to putting your thumb over a hose. Every single object you ever touch very likely has fecal matter on it.

    • @THEGLASSMANSWORLD
      @THEGLASSMANSWORLD Год назад +12

      That would be interesting! Especially compared to a Norwex toothbrush with their silver head attachment. They claim to remove 99.9% bacteria using just water because of the silver. I'd really love to see that!

    • @JS-rv3et
      @JS-rv3et Год назад +13

      i dont keep my brush in the bathroom.
      also you see the vids of the MIST that comes up into the air everytime you flush

    • @divat10
      @divat10 Год назад +7

      ​@@JS-rv3et damn you just destroyed my day with facts

  • @curts7801
    @curts7801 Год назад +2

    None of the usual RUclipsr drivel and antics to pad video length and viewership. Just to the point. Highly respectful of my time and my intelligence. Instant Subscribe. Great job.

  • @AtomicExtremophile
    @AtomicExtremophile Год назад +52

    Only thing I'd have done differently was to cycle clean potable water through first, as a control to see what was in the water - the debris. Then try the unclean water. Either way, this shows that the product works. I considered one myself some years ago, but went for Water-To-Go bottles and filters!

    • @denmanfite3156
      @denmanfite3156 Год назад +8

      I was thinking the same thing: run De-ionized water through the straw/pump to flush them both first, then test the sample. Either way it's still very impressive.

    • @logannevins1959
      @logannevins1959 Год назад +1

      I think establishing a control of running clean water through the pump and straw first and sampling both would've been a nice way to test and flush out any particles from a brand new pump and straw

  • @fbbWaddell
    @fbbWaddell Год назад +69

    Thank you for doing this. We never know how good a product really is without independent testing such as this.

  • @fyrhtu81
    @fyrhtu81 2 года назад +52

    Your final comments RE: debris has me curious, so - lifestraw, vacuum tubing, collection container with two ports in the lid, second port connected also via vacuum tubing to a vacuum pump. Before connecting the lifestraw, sanitize the rig and run some purified water through the rig to pull as much debris out as possible before your sample collection run. Then nearly immediately connect the lifestraw, run the vacuum pump for however long and drain the samples. No risk of contaminating the pump so long as the sample container is large enough, but also able to utilize lab-grade materials in the spots where it matters and properly clean them pre-sample.

    • @WillaHerrera
      @WillaHerrera Год назад +2

      Lol calling that a rig. I like it

    • @WitchMedusa
      @WitchMedusa Год назад

      I would have also liked to see this level of care just to see if it is truly from the straw or the pump.

  • @guess_the_flag9413
    @guess_the_flag9413 2 года назад +5234

    DO MCDONALD ICE PLS (DAY 8 OF ASK )

    • @Si-Al-Ti
      @Si-Al-Ti 2 года назад +283

      I admire your dedication

    • @atpole818
      @atpole818 2 года назад +214

      Yeah yeah we want the ice investigated! 🤔 bet it’ll be gross

    • @flamygtagg9207
      @flamygtagg9207 2 года назад

      @@ForkliftChannel shut up bro

    • @aquicandaquak822
      @aquicandaquak822 2 года назад +75

      He'll Def do it now he hearted ur comment!

    • @xanderunderwoods3363
      @xanderunderwoods3363 Год назад +17

      I concur

  • @zbatchDOC
    @zbatchDOC Год назад +2

    This is the best advertisement for life straw that could ever exist

  • @jaywalker3087
    @jaywalker3087 Год назад +1

    Thankyou.
    Being a wild camper with a straw for backup, I always wondered if it was really that safe.
    Now I know and would like to point out that if I had occasion to have to use it - I would start with running river or stream .
    Great video man..

  • @tommykawasaki9676
    @tommykawasaki9676 Год назад +27

    The Lifestraw worked far better than I thought.
    Impressive product.

  • @kd5txo
    @kd5txo Год назад +28

    I have a phase contrast microscope and love using it. It allows one to view living microorganisms in the process of eating, growing, dividing, etc. without adding stains or having to otherwise process the sample. I was in charge of ensuring the biological water safety aboard a Ship for a few years and would regularly assay water samples for bacteria and chemical contamination. So this video sort of resonated with my past experiences. Thanks for sharing.

  • @robertrosicki9290
    @robertrosicki9290 Год назад +14

    Thankyou for producing this video . I have two Lifestraws in survival kits and you satisfied my curiosity about their effectiveness . Greetings from the frozen fringe of civilization in northern Canada .

  • @tonylam9548
    @tonylam9548 Год назад +28

    One thing in common I found with most of these filters, they all filter out bacteria to near perfection, but not viruses. For people used to drinking treated water from big cities, the virus the filters missed can make you sick, unless the water are further treated. But it is a lot better than no treatment. The best way to treat filtered water in a survival situation would be to leave it in a copper vase for 1/2 a day, or add more copper wires or silver into it for shorter wait time.

    • @jens-kristiantofthansen9376
      @jens-kristiantofthansen9376 Год назад +23

      Or give it a boil if you can.

    • @MG-bs5mr
      @MG-bs5mr Год назад +3

      Or treat it with Chlorine Dioxide tablets.

    • @1ambulator
      @1ambulator Год назад

      A chlorine dioxide tablet will kill viruses and everything else leaving the filtered water as pure as possible, as does pasteurization. Gear Skeptic does an excellent series of videos on backpacking water purification and pasteurization. He uses factual scientific evidence to form conclusions. Well worth your time.

    • @getsideways7257
      @getsideways7257 Год назад +9

      I hope you realize just how much smaller viruses are... You need an osmotic based system to filter out those.

    • @excitationofstereocilia2103
      @excitationofstereocilia2103 Год назад +1

      You cant get a virus this way 😂

  • @aprilscott5112
    @aprilscott5112 Год назад +6

    Seeing how a sawyer mini performs would be great. Also a UV pen thanks for this, I feel much more confident in these filters now!

  • @crispy9175
    @crispy9175 2 года назад +399

    I own a life straw... I'm scared to watch this video...
    Edit after video: thank God

    • @corpsehandler5321
      @corpsehandler5321 Год назад +19

      yeah, that first slide before he even showed the microscope shot was _horrifying_ 😨

    • @LKRBooks
      @LKRBooks Год назад +2

      my friend gave me a life straw like 2 years ago... havent used it yet.
      was hoping my next convo starter with him after seeing this vid would be "so i think you tried to kill me" xD

    • @yaash4123
      @yaash4123 Год назад +5

      @@LKRBooks Would be interesting to see how well it works after more than just one use. Personally, I wouldn't trust a filter and would boil the water afterwards if I could.

  • @tayloranderson456
    @tayloranderson456 Год назад +10

    Pretty cool, thanks. Another suggestion is if you could somehow get samples of tap water from various countries to check that out. Another idea is seeing if laundry sanitizers actually work.

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Год назад +1

      Something I wondered about laundry sanitizers is less about whether they work directly than about whether they're necessary in the context in which they're used. Sure, they probably kill a lot of stuff in the wash itself, but is it anything that would survive the rest of the laundry cycle (eg drying, storage, etc.) in meaningful populations? By the time you go to use an item that's been washed with laundry sanitizer, is it effectively any less infectious than the same item washed without sanitizer?
      It definitely feels like the old marketing ploy of having a "solution" in search of a "problem", so to speak. If there were significant amounts of infection from laundry (outside very specific special circumstances, of course), I think we'd be hearing about it from public-health officials, not detergent hucksters.

  • @THEGLASSMANSWORLD
    @THEGLASSMANSWORLD Год назад +7

    Thank you for doing these tests!
    I hear Sawyer straws are even better than the LifeStraws. I'd like to see Berkey Filters and compatible Berkey Filters. I recently purchased some from AquaCrest to build my own water filtration system for the near future.

  • @FurryNonsense
    @FurryNonsense Год назад +2

    "I have 3 different jars to test"
    **Tests 1 jar and ends the video**

  • @wolfbear7
    @wolfbear7 Год назад +1

    Thank You for doing this. I own several of these and it's good to know they actually work as advertised. The lives of many people might depend on this in an emergency. Again Thank You.

  • @AliAydin06
    @AliAydin06 2 года назад +4

    I was considering to use lifestraw in the future but i had doubts about it. seeing this video helped alot to decide. thank you

  • @CampingforCool41
    @CampingforCool41 Год назад +15

    I’d be interested to know how long it remains this effective. Are you supposed to buy new filters for it regularly?

    • @HappyMSI1
      @HappyMSI1 Год назад +6

      It should be written on the box or on the technical page on a website selling it.

    • @professorhubertj.farnswort7979
      @professorhubertj.farnswort7979 Год назад +10

      The filter never becomes less effective it just gets clogged over time, when you can no longer suck water through it you toss it out and grab a new one.

    • @thomasbh5223
      @thomasbh5223 Год назад +1

      @@professorhubertj.farnswort7979 when the filter becomes clogged is it as effective at filtering?

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Год назад +4

      @@thomasbh5223 Guessing, but I think the idea is that the sign of the filtering becoming ineffective has been engineered to also make using the straw to suck-up unfiltered water impossible. Very smart! Basically makes it as hard as possible for the end-user to use the product incorrectly.

    • @BloodyKnives66
      @BloodyKnives66 Год назад +4

      You're supposed to clean it out using a water syringe they give you after using for really dirty water. But for flowing stream, river etc just a quick rinse is fine. It will filter many gallons of water.

  • @G0DofRock
    @G0DofRock Год назад +17

    Definitely my favorite hiking/camping water bottle ever. Had one for years and always tell people about it.
    Would be cool to test multiple bottles and other products too.

    • @ForbiddTV
      @ForbiddTV Год назад

      You are running a huge gamble. These filters cannot filter out a virus.

  • @racketyjack7621
    @racketyjack7621 Год назад +1

    Wowvman, well done! My wife and I have 2 of these in our vehicles and I've wondered just how well they do. You just answered that question in a big way. Liked and subbed!

  • @victorn6065
    @victorn6065 Год назад

    The algorithm had this in my feed. I love the succinct and to-the-point video editing style you got there!

  • @aigomorla
    @aigomorla Год назад +3

    oh wow... i didn't think the life straw was that effective.
    I found your channel by chance, and i can say its amazing.
    Keep up the great content.

  • @NorthernChev
    @NorthernChev 2 года назад +4

    …what did you do to sterilize the pump you bought before running the filtered water through it???

  • @mycommentpwnz
    @mycommentpwnz Год назад +8

    WOW! That was a very impressive tool.
    I wonder how long the filter works?

  • @MasteringHow-To
    @MasteringHow-To Год назад +1

    I feel like the pump sucked the water too strongly for it to allow the water to be filleted a little better.

  • @elyt
    @elyt Год назад

    Wow... Subscribed!
    Your kind of videos are my jam! Simple, Short, & Concise yet delivers a lot of information. 👏
    Thank you!! 🤍

  • @anthonyglaser929
    @anthonyglaser929 Год назад +7

    Thank you very very much for doing this. I have often wondered just how effective those life straws are. I think I'll probably still boil after filtering, but I'm a little neurotic about that kind of stuff. There are several variants of those Life Straw filter sort of things. I would love to see any of the others tested.

  • @gettygarrettable
    @gettygarrettable 2 года назад +18

    Great video, W for lifestraw. I have a question- do you think you would die if you drank that unfiltered pond water?

    • @CloseIntel
      @CloseIntel  2 года назад +41

      Thank you, appreciate it!
      You would probably get pretty sick depending on how much you drank and how good your immune system is. Lots of different strains of bacteria in there!
      Most water you'll find in nature won't be this gross. I controlled this water to grow as much bacteria and microbes as possible.
      Probably wouldn't die, but wouldn't say it's impossible. It's best to filter it just in case!
      Plus, before being filtered, it smelled awful, so I'd imagine it would be tough to even get down unless you were dying of thirst lol

    • @superherobeatdown
      @superherobeatdown 2 года назад +8

      @@CloseIntel I think it would be cool to filter it once then clean jar and do it again to see if the bacteria can travel up the straw after collecting the filtered stuff once great video man

  • @violettraine1029
    @violettraine1029 Год назад +4

    Wow that’s awesome! Have u tested the Berkey filter yet?

  • @tenton2000k
    @tenton2000k Год назад

    This video was clear, consice, and straight to the point. Upvoted and subscribed.

  • @roderichall201
    @roderichall201 Год назад +1

    Wow, I really didn't expect it to be this good.

  • @TheTrueNarthumpulous
    @TheTrueNarthumpulous Год назад +35

    This is probably the best, most well constructed and narrated educational video I've ever seen on RUclips.
    No wasted time. Concise and straight to the point. Have a like.

  • @diveforknowledge
    @diveforknowledge Год назад +8

    Try adding a control to confirm the source of your contamination: check some potable tap or bottled water under the microscope, then draw that clean water through the lifestraw using the pump. That will confirm whether the contamination came from the pump.

  • @StlouisEman
    @StlouisEman 2 года назад +4

    Do you have any information anywhere as to your imagery capturing set up. I am a photographer and have a potential job photographing a microscopic subject. Not sure the equipment being used but the place is a commercial ingredient lab. I have done some research but your video images are awesome. Thank you!

  • @donwyattaz
    @donwyattaz Год назад +1

    So, the problem I found with these is water storage. I can use the straw to drink from a creek, but I can’t take the water with me. There is no way to fill my water bladder while using it

  • @Pokucollector
    @Pokucollector Год назад +1

    You shouldn't use lifestraw with stagnant water. Best to use with a flowing stream. Amazing how well it works with stagnant water though.

  • @SlideIX
    @SlideIX Год назад +6

    THANK YOU! I’m in the military and my level of survival training is higher than the average soldier but I was never sure if getting the life straw was worthwhile or not. Now I know it would be a real life saver, it will definitely be worth buying and sticking into my go-bag.

  • @zoeydeu2261
    @zoeydeu2261 Год назад +5

    Please do other survival straws and even water purification tablets, thank you! 🙏🏻

  • @Pencil0fDoom
    @Pencil0fDoom Год назад +3

    I own one and the empirical confirmation this video provided may end up saving my life if im ever on the fence in a critical a or b scenario. But im still eager to know how it performs over time & repeated use. Seeing these kinds of results is a far more compelling form of data than manufacturers estimated duty cycle specs.

  • @michaeldunwood5907
    @michaeldunwood5907 Год назад +1

    thank you. i bought one of these as a 'better than nothing' option, but good to see it actually works pretty well.

  • @Darkanii
    @Darkanii Год назад +1

    I would love to see the effect of a simple home made filter with charcoal, sand and sphagnum moss, which is often recomended by outdoor entusiasts.

  • @kikijewell2967
    @kikijewell2967 Год назад +4

    The probiotic and fermented food videos are most useful - they changed my habits and choices around food. Thank you! More of these!

    • @clou09
      @clou09 Год назад +2

      there is a reason our gut biome is separated into "good" and "bad". you would rather have your insides loaded with the good symbiotic ones so if bad bacterias somehow made it, it still needs to compete with the good bacterias before doing damage to you.

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Год назад +3

      @@clou09 There's a lot of parallels here with the modern, holistic approach to pest control in agriculture, called "Integrated Pest Management" or IPM. One proactive approach is to ensure that possible niches in a given ecosystem that could support a pest population are seeded with benign or even beneficial competitors to the pests. Such populations can be established and supported at surprisingly-low cost, and work without the many harmful effects on the ecosystems of healthy soil that often come with harsher chemical methods, which are reserved for more dire situations.
      Also a number of parallels to the analysis of historical geopolitics ("Art of War" kinda stuff). It's like how much of the north coast of France was ceded to the Vikings who then became the Normans; doing so incorporated the Normans into the existing power structure, and also created a buffer for the rest of France. Thereafter, any Vikings raiding the north coast were met with other Vikings who were intimately familiar with their tactics and not at all happy to see them.
      A invasion of pathogens looks a lot like a military invasion; for example, the invader needs to establish a viable beachhead before a wider assault can be launched.

  • @commonsense7057
    @commonsense7057 Год назад +6

    Living in an area that is hit by hurricanes fairly often I have like 10 of these just in case. They are super cheap and apparently worth the investment. Great video.

  • @johnsepulveda2127
    @johnsepulveda2127 Год назад +3

    Why does he sound like old school moist critical 😂

    • @Brabant076
      @Brabant076 Год назад

      I thought my speakers died lmao, it's recorded in mono it seems.

  • @johnfleming8285
    @johnfleming8285 Год назад

    Thank you for doing this video! I have Life Straws in my outdoors gear. It's nice to see if they really work. I'll call this a 'yep'!

  • @hadassah_redeemed
    @hadassah_redeemed Год назад +1

    Wow! The Life Straw worked far better than I thought it would.

  • @Verlisify
    @Verlisify Год назад

    The monotone really sells it in a good way

  • @VIKING-SON
    @VIKING-SON Год назад

    Thanks for taking the time to verify how well Life straw works. I recently purchased one for my emergency go bag / bugout bag. To see someone do an independent testing like this was extremely helpful. Again thanks for your time and efforts.
    Sincerely CWO SHOOK U.S. Army Ret.

  • @thatoneguy454c
    @thatoneguy454c 10 месяцев назад +2

    You should test the Sawyer filters. They actually distribute their water filters in 3rd world countries and are an amazing company.

  • @marixn4003
    @marixn4003 3 месяца назад

    Love the short and to the point and how the test was done.

  • @SolidGeddoe
    @SolidGeddoe 9 месяцев назад +2

    Can you do plantain fermented in red wine? I drank some and it had a huge help on my digestive system,a teaspoon or tablespoon a day

  • @davidyoung6400
    @davidyoung6400 Год назад +1

    Thank you for getting right to the point and not jabbering on for 20 mins before actually getting to it. You earned my subscription for that

  • @djenzskithemanszki1181
    @djenzskithemanszki1181 Год назад +1

    People like you are genuine heroes. Thank you.

  • @ingrids27ec39
    @ingrids27ec39 Год назад

    Wow. Lifestraws look like a good backup filter. Thank you for showing the results.

  • @garyphillips6366
    @garyphillips6366 Год назад

    Thanks for this video. I have a Lifestraw in my survival pack. Glad to know that it works this well.

  • @jarednewburyvlog9973
    @jarednewburyvlog9973 Год назад

    well. this should have been a lifestraw ad. to the point and got it delivered. nice job

  • @DeEmperor1
    @DeEmperor1 3 месяца назад

    Thank you. I was actually looking for a scientific test like this.

  • @tommartinez62
    @tommartinez62 Год назад

    Thanks for the lifestraw video I picked one up at a garage sale a prepper had, and gave it to my grandson an avid hiker.

  • @Chocolategiddyup5
    @Chocolategiddyup5 Год назад

    Short sweet and straight to the point, thank you!

  • @bikinggal1
    @bikinggal1 11 месяцев назад +1

    I bought one over 5 yrs ago to have for emergencies!! Now I have a Berkey filter for my daily use. Still keep the straw for emergencies!

  • @socaliente2543
    @socaliente2543 Год назад +1

    I bought a couple but havent had to use them. This puts my mind at ease.

  • @SpazzyMcGee1337
    @SpazzyMcGee1337 Год назад

    Short, interesting, definitive results, and pertains to something I own. Great video!

  • @PeterAdin
    @PeterAdin 8 месяцев назад

    Great! Exactly what i was looking for in a video about these filters! Thanks very much my friend!!

  • @JackieOwl94
    @JackieOwl94 Год назад +1

    God, I remember the Lifestraw being advertised as a new thing coming up when reading the Scholastic Magazine in 2004. My classmates and I all thought it would never materialize.

  • @TheDoItYourselfWorld
    @TheDoItYourselfWorld Год назад

    That is quite interesting. I never got sick using a filter in the field but I always wondered how well they truly work. I once used the Soldier water filter on some green putrid pond in the heat of summer. We had to. It was yellow and had a taste. But we did not get sick.

  • @Road_Rash
    @Road_Rash Год назад +1

    I will now be confident in buying a Lifestraw... that was amazing...

  • @michaela6147
    @michaela6147 Год назад +1

    Thanks.. I'll be getting one

  • @stevehensonuk
    @stevehensonuk Год назад

    Awesome - I bought some of these on faith - so great to see how well they really work! Thanks

  • @trashpandatee
    @trashpandatee Год назад +1

    I don't think I could ever have been convinced to trust a lifestraw, but this kinda did it for me. I can't believe how well it works.

  • @stuarthamilton5112
    @stuarthamilton5112 Год назад

    Damn! Glad to see my purchase of a Life Straw was not unjustified. That is awesome!

  • @demilung
    @demilung Год назад

    This turned out way better than I expected.

  • @g1stylempdesign929
    @g1stylempdesign929 Год назад

    These Life Straws get the Bugs out in your big out kit. Great gift for people you love

  • @SeraphsWitness
    @SeraphsWitness Год назад

    Wow that's actually impressive. Lifestraw should legit pay you for this footage to advertise with.

  • @kap79
    @kap79 Год назад

    That's amazing. Good to see it actually works as described.

  • @SilverTongue66
    @SilverTongue66 Год назад

    Wow, that was impressive. It was also quite helpful. Thanks for the vid!

  • @jonlee72
    @jonlee72 Год назад

    Thanks for the test. It seems pretty definitive and I have a few Lifestraws for emergencies.

  • @adisbern
    @adisbern Год назад

    I like that is SHORT and to the point of the title. You earned my SUB!

  • @DavidOBrien-y6t
    @DavidOBrien-y6t Год назад +2

    Thanks- how many times can you use the life straw before you're a Gonna?

  • @dyingforpie6879
    @dyingforpie6879 Год назад

    Awesome! I just bought a 6 pak of lifestraws and wondered if they really work. Great to know and obviously the water would preferably be taken from a stream so no doubt now thanks again

  • @Shift18
    @Shift18 Год назад +1

    I took a life straw bottle with me on a kayaking trip to save on space and waste and it works incredibly well! You could just dunk the bottle into the lake, screw on the cap with the life straw built into it and start drinking immediately because it filtered it as you drank. It was super weird at first but it was amazing to always have fresh cold water right next to you.

    • @AndRei-yc3ti
      @AndRei-yc3ti Год назад +1

      The only question is - how many times can u use the straw? How do u clean it?

    • @Shift18
      @Shift18 Год назад +1

      @@AndRei-yc3ti it's been quite a few years since I used it so my info might not be accurate, but I think to clean it you can run water through it backwards like most filters. I think it only has a lifespan of a few years too. But I remember it not being crazy expensive and an amazing investment even if I didn't get much use out of it

  • @kennethswann6458
    @kennethswann6458 4 месяца назад

    You my friend are a genius I'm going over to your channel to look at all your different crap cuz man it's just straighten to the point I absolutely love it