RO/DI Filter

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mcvicker

Loony Bin
Joined
Jan 5, 2006
Messages
204
Location
Seattle
I have an RO/DI filter system that I bought new about four years ago. I waited about a year and replaced all the filters (except RO membrane) and bought a refillable DI canister and plenty of resin so I could refill when needed. About a year and a half ago my water production went way up and I couldn't figure out what was going on but thought it was from changing the pre-filters to those available at Home Depot. I broke my tank down about a year ago to move and towards the end it wasn't looking great. The nitrate, phosphate, etc... was still measuring zero, but I had algae and my SPS were struggling.
I started up a new tank about 3 months ago and have been struggling with hair algae which I expected, but it has not gone away. I test and my nitrate/phosphate are reading zero. I suspect my RO membrane is bad, but I don't have a TDS meter. I was going to order a TDS meter and a new RO membrane just to check this out, btu wanted to see if anyone had any advice. The weird thing is I got the color changing DI resin and I figured if the RO membrane was bad the resin would change color fairly quickly since it was now filtering everything. It hasn't changed color at all, and I know this is obvious now but I realized that the rate of change of the DI would be unaffected by a failure since it only removes ionized particles.
So my questions are: Should I just replace the RO membrane or the entire unit? How do RO membranes normally fail, i.e. is a big increase in output usually part of the failure? Is there something in my tank I can test other than ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, phosphate, to see if I am getting bad water quality?
thanks for the help,
chris
 
...The weird thing is I got the color changing DI resin and I figured if the RO membrane was bad the resin would change color fairly quickly since it was now filtering everything. It hasn't changed color at all, and I know this is obvious now but I realized that the rate of change of the DI would be unaffected by a failure since it only removes ionized particles....

Your initial thinking was correct. If your DI resin was doing all the work, yes, it would change color quickly.

Easiest and cheapest thing would be to just spring for a TDS meter and find out what your output really is - before and after the DI stage. That should answer all your questions.
 

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