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Brian5000

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I finally gave up on the idea of going to Meijer every week and using the Culligan machine.

I bought an RO/DI filter, set it up, and then figured out I needed something to test it with...so the TDS meter is in the mail.

My water is well water, and not the cleanest in the world (particularly iron). My question is, assuming my TDS meter reads 0-20 ppm like it's supposed too, am I good to go? Or is there more to it than that? Do I need to test copper or iron specifically before I use it in my aquarium?
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Anonymous

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(Warning, I am no expert).

Just run off a couple waste gallons and you are good to go!
 

Ben1

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The carbon should remove any metals, should be g2g once it is filtered. My TDS always reads 0 after RO/DI its 132 going in.
 
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Anonymous

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If you cannot put an TDI meter in line, you will have to turn in your reefer card :D
 
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Use your meter (assuming it is a handheld meter) to measure and monitor the tds at 3 locations:
1. Tap water
2. RO water
3. DI water

The TDS in your tap water will likely range from about 50 ppm to upwards of 1000 parts per million (ppm). Common readings are 100 to 400 ppm. So for sake of discussion, let's say your tap water reads 400 ppm. That means that for every million parts of water, you have 400 parts of dissolved solids. How do we go about getting that TDS reading down to somewhere near zero?

If you do some experimenting with your TDS meter, you'll note that your sediment filter and carbon block filter (collectively called prefilters) do very little to remove dissolved solids. So with your tap water at 400 ppm, you can measure the water at the “in” port on your RO housing and you'll see its still approximately 400 ppm.

The RO membrane is really the workhorse of the system. It removes most of the TDS, some membranes to a greater extent than others. For instance, 100 gpd Filmtec membranes have a rejection rate of 90% (i.e., they reject 90% of the dissolved solids in feed water). So the purified water coming from your 100 gpd membrane would be about 40 ppm (a 90% reduction). Filmtec 75 gpd (and below) membranes produce less purified water (aka “permeate”), but have a higher rejection rate (96 to 98%). The life span of a RO membrane is dependant upon how much water you run through it, and how dirty the water is. Membranes can function well for a year, two years, or more. To test the membrane, measure the total dissolved solids (TDS) in the water coming in to the membrane, and in the purified water (permeate) produced by the membrane. Compare that to the membrane’s advertised rejection rate, and to the same reading you recorded when the membrane was new. Membranes also commonly produce less water as their function declines.

After the RO membrane, water will flow to your DI housing. DI resin in good condition will reduce the 40 ppm water down to 0 or 1 ppm. When the DI output starts creeping up from 0 or 1 ppm to 3 ppm, 5 ppm, and higher, you know that your resin needs to be replaced. Sometimes people complain that their DI resin didn't last very long. Often the culprit is a malfunctioning RO membrane sending the DI resin “dirty” water. This will exhaust the resin quicker then would otherwise have been the case. Sometimes the problem is poor quality resin – remember that all resins are not created equal!

Russ
 

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