Boomer
Well-known member
Don
Break down meaning the di resin falling apart
Never heard of that ever
Break down meaning the di resin falling apart
Never heard of that ever
Don
Break down meaning the di resin falling apart
Never heard of that ever
Don
Break down meaning the di resin falling apart
Never heard of that ever
Anything new with your setup? Still runnin smoothly and no TDS on startup?
I have wondered about tds creep and when to flush, how much etc..
If I'm reading this correctly, you are flushing the system post membrane but pre DI for a period of time each time the unit shuts off? Maybe I misunderstood.
Also my system is one I hook up to the faucet each time I want to make water. Do I want to flush the system pre DI for a period of time before each use?
Fourth was easiest, just open the waste line flush valve/ restrictor bypass with the outlet closed for 20 seconds just prior to shut down. (very simple just using a pressure switch and timer board, but after 4 hours of shut down yielded 2 on the conductivity meter 0 at two hours)
One more question, are you sure that the timer board is an elk690? There are only 4 search results for that part number on Google, and one of them is this page.
First there is no "RO resin". I'm not understanding why you think there is head pressure on a rodi system. You could run the hose around the block your still going to get water. You dont need pumps or a pressrue tank to have a solenoid set-up.
TDS creep is the initial high tds water that is comming from the rodi unit. Diluting it does nothing its till there no matter how much you dilute it.
Almost all TDS creep is taken up by the di resin and uses up the di at a quicker rate.
The idea is to get rid of the high tds water and not allow it to ever get to the di resin. When we talk about short cycling what happens is a membrane will have a certain amount of high tds water usually for the first minute or so. If you topped off with a solenoid every time the water level fell just a small amount essentially every time you top of its going to be with high tds water.
There are a few ways around this but what you need to understand is that it take a series of electonics and valves to get the water to the waste while not entering the di resin. Just passing to drain through the resin is defeating since your still eating up the resin.
Since this thread was started my system has evolved to a di flushing system that is flushing the membrane with pure rodi water prior to shut down and is using the initial pass to drain.
Personally I would upgrade your system to a efficient system before attempting anything of this nature. Your missing a few stages that are essential to the life of the membrane and diresin.
Don how bad is creep when you make large quantities as in 30 40 gallons at once then not use the unit for a week?
Right, but I don't understand how option number 4 avoids this. It doesn't appear to dump the high TDS water at startup. Instead, it automatically flushes the RO membrane with filtered water after the RO process is finished, correct? Does this help with TDS creep? How?
Now, flushing is something that should be done after every RO cycle, so this is a great thing to do, and I will likely set this up. If it also gets rid of TDS creep, fantastic!
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