280 in, 29 out. Membranes are past due for replacement imho.
I was once told by Peter Fogwill in my early wfp days that 94% efficiency is about as far as the membranes should go before they should be replaced.
Using resin to polish out those 29 remaining ppm will be costing you.
Nathan, my 450 GPD membranes lasted me 6 years before their efficiency started to deteriorate. I bought the r/o second hand and it was a year old when I bought it. The membranes in the r/o weren't good and I eventually replaced them 6 months later. The previous owner replaced the prefilters for the first time when I bought the r/o.
12 years ago wfp was in its infancy and we knew nothing about this new technology, so much of it was trial and error.
I religiously replaced the prefilters every 3 months. I believe that this is why those 2nd membranes lasted so well. The first owner didn't and I believe that the reason why those first membranes didn't last was because of not replacing those prefilters. The tap water was the same as we live in the same town.
I now recommend using fiberdyne carbon block prefilters and replacing them every 3 months.
I replaced my 450gpd r/o with a 4040 rather than wasting money replacing the membranes. The 4040 is now 4 years old and still performing as it did when new.
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That's what's known as spending a pound to save a penny, at the rate your changing your Fiberdyne filters you could replace
a 4040 membrane every two years and be no worse off, with some of the cheaper membranes you would be well out of
pocket.
I use budget pre filters ( £10 per set ) changed 3 times per year and get 6 or more years from my 4040 membrane.
I know you look at things from a different angle with regard to filter changes, SeanK.
Doug from Daqua mentioned that chlorine content in the water differs depending on how far away you are from the purification plant.
The reason why I focused on Nathan replacing his prefilters regularly was because his membranes are only a year old and already shot. He doesn't use that much water, so chlorine damaging his membranes prematurely has to be a consideration in his case.
For me I happily ordered several GAC prefilters for my new (4 years ago) 4040. As I opened the GAC filter I noticed a label with a warning that the service life of that c/b filter was 2500 gallons.
With a membrane costing £245 and a cheap prefilter, I worked out that if I took the manufacturers service life to heart, that prefilter would only be good for 5000 liters of pure. We use about 13500 liters of pure a month on average.
I also take your point to heart you made a while ago that the manufacturers have no idea how much chlorine is in the water, so its in their interests to give the worst possible figures. It could well be that those GAC filters will have a service life of 5000 gallons on our water supply.
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