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Hi everyone,I set up my ro system yesterday, up till now been using a trolley and di.I was shocked at how much water comes out of the drain pipe. For one litre of pure there must of been 10's of litres of waste. Is this correct or have I done something wrong? My pressure reading is about 40psi when flowing round the ro, does this make any difference?Thanks
i use my ro in my litchen via sink, using a diaphram pump i recycle my waste water so it goes back through ro to become pure , i dont waste it, i then fill 25 litre drums up. to store. so my waste comes out and goes back in again continuously
Quote from: johnny bravo on May 14, 2012, 08:14:44 pmi use my ro in my litchen via sink, using a diaphram pump i recycle my waste water so it goes back through ro to become pure , i dont waste it, i then fill 25 litre drums up. to store. so my waste comes out and goes back in again continuouslyi don't understand, this.the waste has to be removed, all your doing is recirculating the waste and forcing it into the mebranes.you may be saving some water but killing your RO.
http://www.thecleaningwarehouse.co.uk/new-300-gpd-ro-system-1863-p.aspThis is the link for the RO I purchased.Thanks everyone for your help so far.
Have you actually measured the flow ratio? Run the pure and the waste into a couple of containers, the waste into one several times larger than the pure. When the container with the pure is full (it only need to be a couple of lts big) stop the unit. Chuck the pure away, then start pouring the collected waste into the pure container. Count how many times you can fill the pure container with the water from the waste container. That will give you the ratio. If it's not more than about 3:1 it's probably about right. If it's more you've either made a mistake in setting it up, you've got your flush valve open or the restrictor is faulty.
Quote from: Ian Lancaster on May 15, 2012, 07:08:11 pmHave you actually measured the flow ratio? Run the pure and the waste into a couple of containers, the waste into one several times larger than the pure. When the container with the pure is full (it only need to be a couple of lts big) stop the unit. Chuck the pure away, then start pouring the collected waste into the pure container. Count how many times you can fill the pure container with the water from the waste container. That will give you the ratio. If it's not more than about 3:1 it's probably about right. If it's more you've either made a mistake in setting it up, you've got your flush valve open or the restrictor is faulty. or you could just get a measuring jug and time it, thats what I do a lot simpler
Quote from: Ian WW on May 15, 2012, 07:49:08 pmQuote from: Ian Lancaster on May 15, 2012, 07:08:11 pmHave you actually measured the flow ratio? Run the pure and the waste into a couple of containers, the waste into one several times larger than the pure. When the container with the pure is full (it only need to be a couple of lts big) stop the unit. Chuck the pure away, then start pouring the collected waste into the pure container. Count how many times you can fill the pure container with the water from the waste container. That will give you the ratio. If it's not more than about 3:1 it's probably about right. If it's more you've either made a mistake in setting it up, you've got your flush valve open or the restrictor is faulty. or you could just get a measuring jug and time it, thats what I do a lot simpler Can't quite grasp how that gives you the pure/waste ratio? i time the fill to a litre mark on each pure and waste
the waste water recirculating cant do any damage to membranes , its going back through the membranes as water but not as high tds, it mixes with the tap water recirculating through the ro, i cant see how this could damage membranes. these are my thoughts unless anyone can prove otherwise.