The Ultimate Emergency Filter
The ULTRA FILTER has log 6 cleaning capability, which means it removes 99.9999% of protozoa, bacteria, parasites, suspended solids and larger viral contaminants.The filter can operate at a water pressure up to 50 psi (0.33 MPa) and will last well over 3 years with regular back washing.
How to Use
Option 1. Use as a drinking straw.
1. Attach the open soft tube with the clamp attached, to the entry end of the filter and the short clear tube to the exit end, indicated by the arrows.
2. Suck the water up through the filter and in the direction of the arrows, directly into the mouth.
1. Attach the open soft tube with the clamp attached, to the entry end of the filter and the short clear tube to the exit end, indicated by the arrows.
2. Suck the water up through the filter and in the direction of the arrows, directly into the mouth.
Option 2. Use with a folding water bottle or empty pop bottle
1. Fill the blue folding bottle or a pop bottle with dirty water and attach the filter using the screw thread.
2. The filtered water may be squirted directly into the mouth or into a clean container. Set aside part of the filtered water and use this with the syringe for the backwash filter cleaning process.
Option 3. For use with buckets, drums, tanks.
A. Use with a single bucket in an emergency.
1. Using the 13/16” spade drill bit provided and a hand drill or electric drill, make a clean hole 1½” from the bottom of the bucket. Be careful to do this slowly, as harder plastic buckets may form burrs on the inside surface, which can affect the seal. If this happens a good silicone or plumber’s grease on the O ring with help it to seal.
2. When fitting the elbow hose barbs to the bucket, the O ring is to be on the inside of the bucket under the hex nut, which is then tightened.
B. Using 2 buckets for a water system.
1. Using the 13/16” drill bit, drill a hole close to the top of the outside of the 2nd bucket and another hole 1 ½” from the inside base.
2. To install the spigot fitting, push the threaded end of the spigot through the hole with a seal on each side of the bucket wall, then screw the hex nut firmly onto the spigot shaft.
3. When fitting the two elbow hose barbs to the upper and lower buckets, the O ring is to be fitted on the inside of the bucket under the hex nut, which is then tightened.
4. The elbow hose barbs are oriented either vertically or horizontally to avoid the tube kinking and cutting off the water flow. Using 2 buckets as shown, the flow rate will be 100 - 120 gallons of clean water per day.
5. To improve the flow rate to over 400 gallons per day, make a 4ft. separation between the upper and lower containers as shown on the left. A larger separation between containers will increase the flow rate even more.
6. The filter will withstand a pressure of 50 psi (0.33 MPa) and may be attached to a piped water supply, up to that pressure. However, the fittings as supplied are for low pressure use and higher pressure fittings may need to be used with piped in water.
Back Washing the Filter
To back-wash the filter, close the clamp and disconnect the soft tube from the filter. Fill the syringe with clean water, then push the tip of the syringe firmly into the exit end of the filter, indicated by the arrow head and squirt the water back through the filter, opposite to the usual flow direction, allowing it to discharge onto the ground.
Repeat this backwash process 6 - 8 times or until the discharge water is clear. Re-attach the soft tube and the filter is ready for continued use. Back-wash when the flow rate through the filter slows down, though daily back-washing is recommended, or when the filter is no longer needed and is being stored.
1. Fill the blue folding bottle or a pop bottle with dirty water and attach the filter using the screw thread.
2. The filtered water may be squirted directly into the mouth or into a clean container. Set aside part of the filtered water and use this with the syringe for the backwash filter cleaning process.
Option 3. For use with buckets, drums, tanks.
A. Use with a single bucket in an emergency.
1. Using the 13/16” spade drill bit provided and a hand drill or electric drill, make a clean hole 1½” from the bottom of the bucket. Be careful to do this slowly, as harder plastic buckets may form burrs on the inside surface, which can affect the seal. If this happens a good silicone or plumber’s grease on the O ring with help it to seal.
2. When fitting the elbow hose barbs to the bucket, the O ring is to be on the inside of the bucket under the hex nut, which is then tightened.
B. Using 2 buckets for a water system.
1. Using the 13/16” drill bit, drill a hole close to the top of the outside of the 2nd bucket and another hole 1 ½” from the inside base.
2. To install the spigot fitting, push the threaded end of the spigot through the hole with a seal on each side of the bucket wall, then screw the hex nut firmly onto the spigot shaft.
3. When fitting the two elbow hose barbs to the upper and lower buckets, the O ring is to be fitted on the inside of the bucket under the hex nut, which is then tightened.
4. The elbow hose barbs are oriented either vertically or horizontally to avoid the tube kinking and cutting off the water flow. Using 2 buckets as shown, the flow rate will be 100 - 120 gallons of clean water per day.
5. To improve the flow rate to over 400 gallons per day, make a 4ft. separation between the upper and lower containers as shown on the left. A larger separation between containers will increase the flow rate even more.
6. The filter will withstand a pressure of 50 psi (0.33 MPa) and may be attached to a piped water supply, up to that pressure. However, the fittings as supplied are for low pressure use and higher pressure fittings may need to be used with piped in water.
Back Washing the Filter
To back-wash the filter, close the clamp and disconnect the soft tube from the filter. Fill the syringe with clean water, then push the tip of the syringe firmly into the exit end of the filter, indicated by the arrow head and squirt the water back through the filter, opposite to the usual flow direction, allowing it to discharge onto the ground.
Repeat this backwash process 6 - 8 times or until the discharge water is clear. Re-attach the soft tube and the filter is ready for continued use. Back-wash when the flow rate through the filter slows down, though daily back-washing is recommended, or when the filter is no longer needed and is being stored.
Purchase Packs
A. The Travel Pack
The Travel Pack has all you will need for clean water availability when you are hiking or camping and is a carrying weight of just 4.5 oz. It can be used as a drinking straw or with any single start cap thread used water bottle or any pop bottle. A small pin hole for air will allow water to gravity feed through the filter.
Alternatively, a collapsible canteen is provided to contain the dirty water that can then be squeezed into a cup or directly into the mouth through the filter.
The Travel Pack price is $39.90
The Travel Pack has all you will need for clean water availability when you are hiking or camping and is a carrying weight of just 4.5 oz. It can be used as a drinking straw or with any single start cap thread used water bottle or any pop bottle. A small pin hole for air will allow water to gravity feed through the filter.
Alternatively, a collapsible canteen is provided to contain the dirty water that can then be squeezed into a cup or directly into the mouth through the filter.
The Travel Pack price is $39.90
B. Emergency Pack
The Emergency Pack uses the customer’s own bucket or drum container and will filter water when the filter is allowed to hang down with the rubber sealing cap open. The bucket or drum is drilled and the fittings attached. A clamp seals the delivery tube when the filter is removed, to refill the bucket with dirty water.
The Emergency Pack price is $49.90 with one 13/16” drill bit.
The bulk pack of 10 Emergency Kits is $449, 1 free drill bit.
The Emergency Pack uses the customer’s own bucket or drum container and will filter water when the filter is allowed to hang down with the rubber sealing cap open. The bucket or drum is drilled and the fittings attached. A clamp seals the delivery tube when the filter is removed, to refill the bucket with dirty water.
The Emergency Pack price is $49.90 with one 13/16” drill bit.
The bulk pack of 10 Emergency Kits is $449, 1 free drill bit.
Buy One, We'll Donate One!
Buy any ZOEN filter pack from ENSOL, L.L.C. and we’ll donate one for each filter purchased, to the “Water Serve Foundation” for free distribution to a needy community in Nepal, India or another emerging country.
NEPAL – INDIA REPORT
Dear Friends,
It’s hard to imagine life without anything but muddy and contaminated water to drink but that’s what happened in Nepal around Kathmandu following the 7.8 and 7.2 magnitude earth quakes in April and May 2015. The hundreds of aftershocks caused people to live outdoors in fear of another major quake. Water Serve was able to send a 3 man team from Bangalore immediately, taking 100 filters with them, to train Nepali families, refugees and church pastors in their use and maintenance. Training sessions were held in the city and in 9 locations within 50 miles of Kathmandu at churches and refugee camps as Phase 1 of our assistance program.
Phase 2 took place in June when ENSOL's CEO met with local aid organization leaders, church leaders, military commanders and concerned factory owners, all of whom were desperate for pure water. At each meeting filters were given out for shared use, also field testing in some cases. Since each filter will easily clean 100 gallons of water per day, families were organized into groups of 5 and given a bucket with a filter installed for their daily use. Each recipient of a filter signed an agreement that they would share the filtered water and the ID number of the filter they received was recorded. More filters were sent from Oklahoma City and distributed, 1,225 in all, enough clean water for 24,500 adults.
Filters were also distributed to some remote villages affected by avalanches, by our Nepal friend and contact James Tamang. He recently emailed that he needs another 1,000 filters for more villages and refugee camps this year. The need continues and many organizations want filters for the safety of their traveling missions staff.
To help get more filters overseas we are offering them for sale to people within the USA who want one for their own water security, or for camping, back packing or for a neat gift. The Water Serve filters are being sold under the trade name ZOEN by ENSOL, L.L.C.
CEO
ENSOL, LLC
Dear Friends,
It’s hard to imagine life without anything but muddy and contaminated water to drink but that’s what happened in Nepal around Kathmandu following the 7.8 and 7.2 magnitude earth quakes in April and May 2015. The hundreds of aftershocks caused people to live outdoors in fear of another major quake. Water Serve was able to send a 3 man team from Bangalore immediately, taking 100 filters with them, to train Nepali families, refugees and church pastors in their use and maintenance. Training sessions were held in the city and in 9 locations within 50 miles of Kathmandu at churches and refugee camps as Phase 1 of our assistance program.
Phase 2 took place in June when ENSOL's CEO met with local aid organization leaders, church leaders, military commanders and concerned factory owners, all of whom were desperate for pure water. At each meeting filters were given out for shared use, also field testing in some cases. Since each filter will easily clean 100 gallons of water per day, families were organized into groups of 5 and given a bucket with a filter installed for their daily use. Each recipient of a filter signed an agreement that they would share the filtered water and the ID number of the filter they received was recorded. More filters were sent from Oklahoma City and distributed, 1,225 in all, enough clean water for 24,500 adults.
Filters were also distributed to some remote villages affected by avalanches, by our Nepal friend and contact James Tamang. He recently emailed that he needs another 1,000 filters for more villages and refugee camps this year. The need continues and many organizations want filters for the safety of their traveling missions staff.
To help get more filters overseas we are offering them for sale to people within the USA who want one for their own water security, or for camping, back packing or for a neat gift. The Water Serve filters are being sold under the trade name ZOEN by ENSOL, L.L.C.
CEO
ENSOL, LLC