LARQ also has a Movement bottle which is not insulated but it's really really light and the bigger one is over 32 oz in volume. The tops are interchangable, as always, so it can use both PureVis to kill the bacteria and the filter.
Yes - but very cumbersome to use and meant for different use cases. Larq is not a backcountry water filtration solution - more about the typical traveler getting back water from municipal sources. I have Grayl, Larq, and LifeStraw - each with its own advantages / disadvantages. For business travel, Larq is great. Grayl is great for drinking swamp water and staying safe - Lifestraw is somewhere in-between with limitations on chemical removal. Choose whatever best suits your needs.
Tap water is treated with chlorine and flouride to treat and kill bacteria etc. That being said water filters are designed to filter out heavy metals and this already filtration tech will also filter out bacteria aswell. So what is the parts per million filtration rating on this bottle? Brita is 6PPM and Zero water filter is 0 PPm why doesnt anyone talk about metal ppm ratings with this bottle after filtration? Seems like a bit of a scam tbh
LARQ filter takes out chlorine as well as VOC, microplastics, pharmaceuticals etc. There is an independent lab report stating there is no heavy metals left after filtration.
Finally a good review where you show all the parts clearly, thankyou! :)
LARQ also has a Movement bottle which is not insulated but it's really really light and the bigger one is over 32 oz in volume. The tops are interchangable, as always, so it can use both PureVis to kill the bacteria and the filter.
Just spend a bit more and get a Grayl, which also removes viruses.
Yes - but very cumbersome to use and meant for different use cases. Larq is not a backcountry water filtration solution - more about the typical traveler getting back water from municipal sources. I have Grayl, Larq, and LifeStraw - each with its own advantages / disadvantages. For business travel, Larq is great. Grayl is great for drinking swamp water and staying safe - Lifestraw is somewhere in-between with limitations on chemical removal. Choose whatever best suits your needs.
@@paull3373 wdym with "business travel"? meaning it has better aesthetics for formality?
what would you recommend for someone thats traveling for vacation and/or wanting to use regular tap water on the daily?
@@tiredbbyLarq since im assuming ur not drinking swamp water
Tap water is treated with chlorine and flouride to treat and kill bacteria etc. That being said water filters are designed to filter out heavy metals and this already filtration tech will also filter out bacteria aswell.
So what is the parts per million filtration rating on this bottle? Brita is 6PPM and Zero water filter is 0 PPm why doesnt anyone talk about metal ppm ratings with this bottle after filtration? Seems like a bit of a scam tbh
LARQ filter takes out chlorine as well as VOC, microplastics, pharmaceuticals etc. There is an independent lab report stating there is no heavy metals left after filtration.
Yikes. I knew the micro USB sucked, but that giant tampon of a filter is just the definition of a flaw.