

💧 Elevate your hydration game with trusted purity and precision fit!
The Genuine CB6AD Multipure Replacement Filter is a premium solid carbon block filter engineered exclusively for Multipure Aquadome plastic countertop water systems. NSF-certified to reduce a wide range of contaminants affecting taste, odor, and health, it upholds rigorous ANSI standards 42, 53, and 401. Proudly developed and refined in the USA for over 50 years, this filter ensures optimal system performance and maintains your warranty. Perfect for professionals who demand clean, great-tasting water with zero compromise.
| Material | Carbon,Plastic |
| Item Weight | 2.4 Pounds |
| External Testing Certification | ANSI, NSF |
| Product Benefits | Reduces a broad array of contaminants for cleaner, healthier water while maintaining high water quality standards. |
| Brand | Multipure |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Manufacturer | Multipure |
| Part Number | CB6AD |
| Item Weight | 2.4 pounds |
| Item model number | CB6AD |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
S**R
Own unit B4 buy filter.
You need to own their Water Filter System before you could buy their filters. Or else they won't sell it you.
S**L
The product fit whereas I ordered an MPAD before and ...
The product fit whereas I ordered an MPAD before and couldn't use it and it's sitting on my shelf, it didn't even though it said it would
E**N
Keeps water tasting good
Good filter. I replace it yearly.
C**R
Horrible quality. Multipure has terrible service.
Horrible quality. Cheap plastic parts. Terrible customer service. Not worth the money.
J**M
What Percent of Chlorine and Chloramine Does this Filter Actually Remove?
One of the two "Most Helpful Customer Reviews" of this company's Multipure stainless steel filter, which this expensive filter fits into, says the buyer is allergic to chloramine, bought this filter, and still has an allergic reaction to the filtered water. His allergic reaction tells us only that the filter doesn't remove ALL the chloramine. That is, it could be that his body is so sensitive to the ammonia in chloramine that even perhaps 1/10 of the concentration added to the water supply by the water authorities, causes you a reaction.The only way to test the effectiveness of the filter is to test the water before filtration and after, to see how much chloramine is removed at slow flow speed, medium flow speed, and high flow speed. (High speed is what comes out of the tap when the faucet is turned on full.)If this filter removes 70% at high flow speed, it's good enough for me and I'll buy it. I don't know if it does.Like the vast majority of the population, and unlike the above filter reviewer, I'm not allergic to drinking chloramine or showering in it. (Although even the water district says that long term exposure effects on humans has not determined yet.) But I've read that it harms garden vegetables to water them with chlorine or chloramine; I'm an avid veg gardener. I love to grow tomatoes, beans, potatoes, carrots, etc.The company should, after your review, publish the results of the effectiveness test they have undoubtedly performed before they released the filter for sale, telling us prospective buyers what percentages of Chlorine and Chloramine are removed at what faucet speeds. Faucet flow speeds are measured in gallons per minute.In order to know if their filter was working, its inventors would have HAD to done these exact scientific tests. If they decline to release the exact test results, one would have to ask why they decline.They cannot say it removes Chloramine (as they are now claiming on their website and in their product description for the various retailers' sites) unless it removes almost all of it, can they? [Note: many reservoirs/ water districts are switching from chlorine to chloramine, under pressure from federal authorities. Chloramine is much more difficult to filter out, boil out, or sun-exposure out, than is chlorine.]Or is there a legal difference between saying the filter "removes chloramine" and "removes the chloramine." (Inclusion of the word "the" may mean it removes all of it; absence of the word "the" may mean it removes most of it.)Can't we ask the seller to answer these questions, i.e., to provide the test results? Does anyone know how to ask them? I and many others are holding back buying this questioned product until this is cleared up. The veg garden will just have to suffer the chloramine until it is provided.If it were less expensive, I would just buy it without the specs. : (Note: After receiving the below comment from Multipure showing it removes 97% both of chlorine and chloramine, I raised this review from 2 stars to 4 stars. Thanks for the response. --James Hannum, EEH NYC
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