How your showerhead and fridge got roped into the culture wars
How your showerhead and fridge got roped into the culture wars

How your showerhead and fridge got roped into the culture wars

How your showerhead and fridge got roped into the culture wars
How your showerhead and fridge got roped into the culture wars
I'm fine with putting more insulation on refrigerators, but low-flow showerheads are a serious disappointment in showering experience. I want to be hammered by that water, not misted.
I always get downvoted for saying it, but I don't care because the real water savings never came from stupid showers: It comes from not growing crops in the damned desert; it comes from not growing grass on lawns in arid environments; it comes from not raising so many cattle.
Most low flow shower heads have a plastic insert in them called a restrictor that can be removed to make it work like the high flow ones.
It's nothing more than a small cylinder that can be pushed or pulled out from the shower line and manufacturers use these restrictors because it allows them to sell the same unit in multiple markets.
EDIT: Forgot to add water savings reasons.
Another factor is that your shower water is very probably --- unless you have some sort of gray-water irrigation system going on or something --- heading to a sewage treatment plant, and if we wanted to do so, we can purify the water there, make that closed loop and feed back into the water supply, recover basically all the water from treatment.
The UK does it:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/08/29/uk-drink-sewage-water-squeamish-wastewater-recycle/
California and some other states are doing it:
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/california-is-set-to-become-2nd-state-to-approve-rules-for-turning-wastewater-into-drinking-water
Plus, in California and a lot of other places, we can (and do) desalinate water.
https://www.sdcwa.org/your-water/local-water-supplies/seawater-desalination/
It costs more than pulling from a river, and that's economically-difficult for agriculture...but it's just not prohibitive for residential use, and there's a whole ocean of water out there.
https://www.sdcwa.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/desal-carlsbad-fs.pdf
An acre-foot of water will, depending upon where in the country you are --- usage levels vary by area --- supply about one to four households for a year at average usage. And that price is in California; electricity is a major input to desalination, and California has some of the highest electricity prices in the US, generally second only to Hawaii and something like double most of the country. It'll be significantly cheaper to desalinate water in most other places.
I had to come back here specifically to thank you.
We have a "rainfall" showerhead that has been a huge disappointment since we installed it. Your comment popped into my head today as I was about to jump in the shower. All I had to do was remove a little o-ring and now it works fantastic! It also cut my shower time in half.
Not that I disagree, but good ones DO have a different system in place. They take in air, to make the drops bigger and it feels like there's more water being spread out. Doesn't help with the pressure complaint, but it does really help IMO!
And that does save you money because less energy is used to heat up water.
No idea at what point you talk about where the real savings actually come from, but not anywhere after that colon.
As someone who dislikes traditional low flow heads that tend to icepick you with little streams, I highly recommend high sierra showerheads. I don't know how they pull it off, but it absolutely blasts you with water while still being low flow. Like I prefer it to any other shower head I've tried, low flow or not.
They make one with an adjustable valve that let's you dial in the perfect amount of flow too.
Their website says make american showers great again :\
High Sierra shower heads are awesome. Installed them in each of our bathrooms. Feels like a rain shower, with more pressure then our previous stock shower head while still saving water. Win-win. They also manufacture them in small town in the foothills of the Sierra mountains which is a pretty cool fact.
I liked em so much I wrote a blog post about it
https://pdx.su/blog/2023-01-30-a-good-shower/
I used to feel the same way, going as far as to drill out the flow restriction devices, but I found a shower head I actually like a few years back, a high Sierra brand one, and even it's lowest flow model feels powerful
I liked it so much I wrote a blog post about it
https://pdx.su/blog/2023-01-30-a-good-shower/
Thanks for sharing this. I really prefer the wider diameter nozzles as this style always just feels like a garden hose to me, but I might give it a try as I also have not been very happy with anything I've tried. Any reason you didn't do the long nut version?
Same. Managed to remove the flow regulator out of my new one. Back to proper pressure!
Proper pressure = quicker showers and replacing the showerhead less often because the hard water buildup doesn't turn the lazy river pressure into a trickle. Needing to double flush a low flow toilet sucks too.
Agriculture in the wrong areas and useless lawns are the real water wasters.