Add a watersoftner before the merlin. Reduced my tds after merlin by 10 or so tds and improves the life of membrains
Now there's an interesting idea. I may well try that. As I'm trying to keep my outgoings as low as possible what would the approximate cost of the softener? What would be the best position to place the softener in line. My current setup goes:-
Iron pre-filter.
Sediment pre-filter.
Then the merlin sequence that goes chlorine/carbon pre-filter, membrane membrane.
There is also a small flush tank to one side that apparently activates automatically.
I'm assuming a softener would go between sediment and the merlin bits?
If it would cost as much as or more than for the softener than it would for reduced resin usage and longer membrane life then I would probably leave alone. But if there were a noticeable saving to be made then I would probably go for it.
This is the one I use....
http://www.thecleaningwarehouse.co.uk/water-softener-kit-complete-with-salt-1093-p.asp
Mine runs first straight from the tap, but that is the only thing I have between merlin and tap.
The other cost you have to bare in mind is the cost of the salt to recharge the unit. About £16 for 25lts and you will use a litre for every 1,000 lts of water that run through it.
So time to get the calculator back out.
Thanks Paul.
So assuming I use 4,000 litres (guess) per week (incl. waste) the softener would cost about £3.00 p.w.
With a decrease of 010 in post RO TDS that would save resin. Of the 4,000 litres, only about 2,500 would hit the resin.
500,000/10 = 50,0000 litres. So if I've done that right, I would save a 25kg bag of resin every 50,000 litres of pure (about 20 weeks).
For easy numbers say £80 a bag so a saving of £4 a week plus the possibility of longer membrane life. The idea may have some merit. However, the overall calculation is just about the salt. Is the softener itself an additional cost? I'm not concerned about one off costs such as the vessel as those costs become trivial over time. It's just the costs of the more frequent "renewables" that I'm trying to work with.
Thank you for bringing this up. I need to look into it I think.