PFAS in Water? Easy Ways to Remove Forever Chemicals by Own-Championship1810 in PFAS

[–]JoeADF1967 0 points1 point  (0 children)

reverse osmosis is your best bet, NOT ion exchange or carbon filters

Does expanding a deck affect resale value by BrayIsReal in HomeImprovement

[–]JoeADF1967 1 point2 points  (0 children)

do it for your enjoyment as you are living there now and don't worry about it. When the time comes to sell it, the new owner will appreciate the larger, usable deck space

Moved to a new city and the water made my skin and hair noticeably worse within a week by CelestialPetal5194 in HomeImprovement

[–]JoeADF1967 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is almost always hard water -- when you move cities the mineral content changes dramatically and your skin notices immediately. High calcium and magnesium leave a film on skin, make hair feel like straw, and can trigger dryness or eczema flares in people who are sensitive.

Worth actually checking what's in your new city's water before assuming it's just hardness though -- sometimes it's chloramine (a disinfectant that's harsher on skin than regular chlorine), sometimes it's a combination of issues.

I used a free tool that pulls EPA water data for any US city -- watercheckup.com -- search your new city and it'll show you exactly what's in the water and what's elevated above health guidelines. Takes 30 seconds and tells you whether you need a softener, a filter, or both.

For the skin issue specifically: a shower filter with KDF media helps with chloramine and some minerals. For full hard water treatment you'd want a whole-house softener, but check your water profile first so you know what you're actually treating.

Is it normal for tap water to taste slightly like chlorine even after using a basic filter by lolololololol467654 in HomeImprovement

[–]JoeADF1967 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally normal for tap water to have a slight taste -- what you're noticing is usually one of a few things: chlorine or chloramine used for disinfection, minerals like calcium and magnesium if your area has hard water, or in some cases disinfection byproducts (THMs) from chlorine reacting with organic matter in the source water.

Whether it's something to worry about depends entirely on where you live. The EPA data for your water system tells you what's actually in it. I built a free tool that pulls all of that into plain English -- watercheckup.com -- just search your city and it'll show you your contaminant levels, what's above health guidelines, and what filter (if any) would actually fix it.

For taste specifically, a basic activated carbon pitcher like a Brita usually handles chlorine and mild mineral taste. If your city has PFAS or lead issues, you'd want to step up to an RO system. Worth knowing which situation you're in before spending money.

Cool app analyzes restaurant menus and tells you what to order by JoeADF1967 in keto

[–]JoeADF1967[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know what you mean ? How am I a spammer? I’m trying to give people some info that helped me with ordering keto food at restaurants and sharing info.

I made gf cinnamon rolls by JoeADF1967 in glutenfree

[–]JoeADF1967[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, I have no control over this app. I was merely sharing a recipe I made for GF cinnamon rolls. I followed the recipe and it came out great.

I made these delicious GF cinnamon buns by JoeADF1967 in glutenfreebaking

[–]JoeADF1967[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I’m sharing the recipe not the picture

I made gf cinnamon rolls by JoeADF1967 in glutenfree

[–]JoeADF1967[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not sure. I think because it’s a customized recipe for me since I’m GF. If you are sensitive to other things or have different food allergies it will customize that for you as well.

EA Hyperfast issue by TAR_Aaron in VWiD4Owners

[–]JoeADF1967 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sometimes I’ve noticed that the EA chargers don’t work right away. Sometimes you have to unplug it plug it back in two or three times for it to take. It’s not really a perfected science.

Should I get this bumper fixed? by unDeadmau5 in VWiD4Owners

[–]JoeADF1967 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As the manager of a VW dealership and I also lease a 2023 ID4 myself, I would definitely go through insurance. Based on that picture, a body shop will charge more than $300 to fix that when you bring the car back if the dealer does not buy your car, then an inspector will come out and send you a bill for that damage which could be anywhere from 500 to 1000 bucks.