Added: 2 years ago
From: raoulpop
Views: 48,477
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  • why dont u just take the pump off and drink out the water bottle

  • How about using a valve, an air inlet and mounting the bottle upside down? Then no pumping is required... :D

    Or if you insist on the bottle upright, then put a pipe in it like you did, then extend the pipe in the outside down under the bottom of the bottle and put a valve there. If said pipe was full of water to begin with, then no pump needed, flows till the bottle runs out of water... :)

  • @kistuszek Yes, but the methods you describe require extra work that requires specific know-how, which most people don't have. This pump is a simple solution that works right out of the box, with any bottle that has the same-size opening.

  • @raoulpop

    Well IF elementary physics are a problem, then i say its a nice way to bring it to people. I mean people didn't know how to use the drinking straw right?! They get water a physics demo in the same time, water _and_ education in a nice easy to consume package!! :)

  • @kistuszek~ ye this is totally crap.

  • "smooth is quite flow"

    well done....

  • I just bought this water pump but do you know how I can disassemble the pump so that I can clean the spring where you press the water out? I'm worried the water will corrode the spring over time.

  • @okaythisisnasty I don't think the spring comes in contact with the water. That would be a foolish design. I think the water is routed through a separate channel and right out the pouring spout. Or perhaps the spring isn't made of metal, but of plastic as well.

  • I must be a horny perve cause all i think about is sex after watching this.

  • not a vacuum but pressurizes the bottle and forces the water out.

  • Yeah it works this way

    This pump can also create an over pressure in the bottle , it would work the same way..

  • MMMMMM warm water lovely, I still like the water dispenser with the flipped jug no pumping necassary, and if you like warm water lol........ don't be a simpleton unplug it??? Ice please.

  • Sounds like a great deal of work for room temperature water. Why not filter and pour?

  • @arbonac You're missing the point. This has no carbon footprint.

  • @raoulpop Of course there is. You have to consume extra calories to expend the effort, and somewhere a plant or animal is going to die for those extra calories you need to expend to do the pumping.

  • @kicstart Are you American or just willing to make excuses for being lazy like one?

  • @raoulpop No "YOU" are missing the point.  The bottle and the pump require energy and materials to be produced. If you want to decrease your carbon footprint, pour the water directly from the bottle, don't waste materials and energy on a stupid pump. If you want to decrease your carbon footprint even more, drink from the tap, then you don't have to drive to the store or have water delivered...Those big machines don't use energy to dispense the water, it uses the energy to heat and cool it.

  • @nambinhvu The giant water dispensers use gravity to allow the water to be dispensed, it also has hot and cold water tanks, which heat and cool the water for convenience.  Do me a favor, fill your sink with water, then fill a cup with water in the sink, and tip it upside down so that the opening is completely submerged in the water, then raise the end above the water keeping the opening submerged. Notice the water stays in the cup, that's how those water dispensers work.

  • i got a pump like tht too. now i dont need to pour from that 10 galon bottle cuz i cant lift it

  • bravo ma, aratale la prosti de americani cum se face!!!

  • looks very practical for use in warm countries. saves breaking your back over those huge bottles right?

  • @spritersie Absolutely!

  • I think it is because in my country we can drink our tap water. So I'm not used to these things.. If I had to buy bottles of water I would probably buy big bottles ;-)

    Don't the big ones have a tap at the bottom (then you won't have to pump - if you have air coming from above)

  • @Norfeldt Nope, they're just big, bulky bottles made from cheap, easily collapsible plastic, with screw-on lids on top. So they're quite difficult to handle without a dispenser.

  • I don't see the point.. Why not just pour it without the dispenser???

    The only reason this could be practical is if you are concerned about contamination.. But with the size of that bottle it will not take long before its empty anyway.

  • @Norfeldt Not if the bottle weighs 5-10 kilos. Children and older adults will have problems lifting those bottles, not only because of their weight, but their bulk as well. Instead of struggling to lift it and spilling water all over the place, it's much more practical to use a pump like this one to dispense it directly into the glass.

  • What is the thing thats on top of the water jug? where can you buy it?

  • @placard3 That's the pump I talked about in the video. If you want to buy one like it, go to Amazon and do a search for "bottled drinking water hand pump with dispenser".

  • you could also do a video showing the comparison between the huge car engines (# of cylinders) used in US and smaller car engines used in Europe.

    how much time are you using the entire power of the 6, 8 or more cylinders engines in US? you say there's no more oil and the price is rising day by day ?

    we're having 90% of European cars fitted with just 4 cylinders and trust me, we are fully using their power instead of crying for oil and going to Iraq and 'free' people there...

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