lightweight water still

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lightweight water still

Postby SteveJ » Wed 17 Nov, 2010 10:35 am

Is there a light weight still available on the market for processing salt water to fresh? I know a few sea kayakers that are working on them and can produce 1.5 liters of fresh water in 50 minutes (on a wood fire) but was wondering if it has been done comercially in a lightweigh package (sea kayak models are a useable 860 grams). I know the Southern Islanders have no need for such things but us coastal mainlanders struggle to find water in some locations and such a machine would greatly ease the burden of water finding on many walks.

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Re: lightweight water still

Postby Franco » Wed 17 Nov, 2010 11:38 am

had a l,ook at that DIY bit you alluded to :
http://nadgeekayaks.com.au/news-events/ ... drink.html
and thought that maybe this :
http://www.theboilerwerks.com/about/
type of burner (modified as above) would work well for that.
This particular is very small , but light, but a 1.5/2 L version could do.
In essence a lighter version of the Kelly Kettle or the NZ Thermette.
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I just bought one of those pint size kettles...
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Re: lightweight water still

Postby johnw » Wed 17 Nov, 2010 2:00 pm

I know nothing about them but this looked interesting:

KATADYN SURVIVOR 06 MANUAL DESALINATOR

Fact Sheet

According to the blurb "The world's smallest desalinator".
Weighs 1.13kg/Dimensions: 12.7 x 20.3 x 6.4 cm, so not too heavy/bulky for walking I guess.
Price looks to be about $A1600 though :shock:.
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Re: lightweight water still

Postby Franco » Wed 17 Nov, 2010 8:59 pm

890 ml per hour. That is a lot of pumping...
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Re: lightweight water still

Postby Liamy77 » Wed 17 Nov, 2010 9:48 pm

you can do it with a trangia-type stove kettle and some food grade tubing from the home brew shop... ok for smaller amounts... i have also used a roll of aluminium can wall to join the tube to the spout and to stop the tube getting hot enough to melt h ave messed around trying to use a s2s sink to help cool the tube too...
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Re: lightweight water still

Postby johnw » Thu 18 Nov, 2010 1:03 pm

Franco wrote:890 ml per hour. That is a lot of pumping...
Franco

True Franco, but think of how fit you'd get....and probably thirsty :wink:.

"Waste water provides pressure for easy pumping"
"Recirculation of energy reduces energy expended by 50-90%"

Maybe it's not too difficult? Although I don't think I'd enjoy standing around pumping for an hour to get <1 litre of water.
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Re: lightweight water still

Postby climberman » Thu 18 Nov, 2010 4:23 pm

Steve - Andrew McAuley used a Kataydn 'Survivor-35' manual desalinator (15mins=1L) when he attempted the Tasman, according to Vicky McAuley's recent book 'Solo'. I just checked - it'd be heavier than your boat ! at 3.5kgs.

Nice story on the Nadgee Kayaks site.
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