I cant think of any reason for it. If you collect the steam from boiled tap water you would have distilled water but that's a lot of work for something so cheap and readily available.
This is essentially correct. As you increase the temperature of the water, ionic compounds will usually increase in their solubility and rate of solubility. As long as you are below the solubility limits of the compounds at the temperature it will be used at, like 70°F, it will help dissolve them faster. That is all. The amount of time and energy spent heating the water will only be a waste though.
If you are trying to get rid of chlorine then boiling does it. Also getting your water from the hot tap will get rid of the chlorine. You can also let it stand for several hours and the chlorine will dissipate. Not sure if it helps anything unless you have a lot of chlorine in the water.
If you are trying to get rid of chlorine then boiling does it. Also getting your water from the hot tap will get rid of the chlorine. You can also let it stand for several hours and the chlorine will dissipate. Not sure if it helps anything unless you have a lot of chlorine in the water.
i dump my water into a big ass bucket... drop an air stone in it and bubble it for 24 hours before i use it so that chlorine and its cousin, chloramine, evaporate out. thought i read it takes more than 24 hours to get all of the chloramine out... poor poor microbes.
dont boil your water unless your doing a quick flush.