Overall, I'm not too worried about metals and chemicals from the rainwater or my roof.
To quote from
The Texas Rainwater Harvesting Manual "drinking rainwater, consider the path
taken by the raindrop through a
watershed into a reservoir, through
public drinking water treatment and
distribution systems to the end user.
Being the universal solvent, water
absorbs contaminants and minerals on its
travels to the reservoir. While in
residence in the reservoir, the water can
come in contact with all kinds of foreign
materials: oil, animal wastes, chemical
and pharmaceutical wastes, organic
compounds, industrial outflows, and
trash. It is the job of the water treatment
plant to remove harmful contaminants
and to kill pathogens. Unfortunately,
when chlorine is used for disinfection, it
also degrades into disinfection byproducts,
notably trihalomethanes,
which may pose health risks. In contrast,
the raindrop harvested on site will travel
down a roof via a gutter to a storage
tank. Before it can be used for drinking,
it will be treated by a relatively simple
process with equipment that occupies
about 9 cubic feet of space."
The amount of heavy metals/chemicals the water will leech from my shingles in the short time of contact will be ultra-tiny.
Backflushing is one way of cleaning the sand filter. Removal and replacement of the sand also works and fromn a design point of view is much easier. Lots of good info on slow sand filters
here.
-Blast