Some cheap c/b filters only have a service life of 10,000 liters.
How long should membranes last? Easy answer is; how long is a piece of string?
Our tap water is 105ppm today and we haven't a high calcium content in the water. Our kettle 'furs' up but takes a long time. and its just a thin layer. The membranes in my 450GPD lasted 6 years with 2 of us and a 3rd in the last 9 months.
Currently we have a 4040 and the membrane in that is nearly 4 1/2 years old and still performing as it did when new.
I bought the first r/o (450GPD) second hand. It was a year old and had never had prefilters changed until I bought it. Those membranes only lasted 2 years.
If you have a high calcium content or very hard water, then your membrane may last a year, might even get 2 years from them.
The systems Brodex sold always had premature membrane failure as they sold their systems with only a sediment filter and no carbon block.
You can get chlorine testers from any swimming pool outlet or from Ebay. It consists of a test tube that you fill to a line with water. You then drip a chemical supplied into the test tube, shake and then compare the colour of the water against a colour sheet. I think we used to put 3 drops in.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Easy-To-Use-Swimming-Pool-Test-Kit-Chlorine-Bromine-PH-Tester-Hot-Tub-Testing-/181445331614?hash=item2a3efc0a9e:g:tlIAAOxyLm9TBzPgIt wasn't very accurate but it was enough to give us an idea of how much chlorine we had to add to our swimming pool water each evening in South Africa. In summer we used more chlorine than in winter. If you notice the colours on the chart are very close to each other and difficult to judge as the tester always seemed to be a colour between.
I now see there are electronic chlorine testers but I have no idea how good they are
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/pH-Cl2-Chlorine-Level-Tester-Swimming-Pool-Water-Spa-Meter-Monitor-UK-/231881916985?hash=item35fd3d4239:g:xLUAAOSwd0BVwYQBThe other issue is that its more difficult trying to get a test sample after the prefilters - well it is on my 4040.
When we get advice that the water board will be flushing the pipes I'm inclined to only run my r/o at night to ensure I don't get a higher concentration of chlorine into my prefilters.
We don't get a chlorine smell from the water tbh, even when we draw water first thing in the morning.
The problem we have is the amount of sediment in the water, not the amount of chlorine.
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