6 MUST HAVE Reverse Osmosis Water System Features -- don't buy before watching!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025

Комментарии • 67

  • @angelsong119
    @angelsong119 10 месяцев назад +5

    The permeate pump? I had no idea this was happening. We are on metered water so, thinking about the environment and the wasting of water is very important!
    Thank you for this information.

  • @silberfarb
    @silberfarb Год назад +26

    Please elaborate on why you think tankless doesn't work. thank you.

    • @mikechapin5669
      @mikechapin5669 7 месяцев назад +5

      My name is Mike I have been working with arrows for 30 years the tankless on-demand under sink Ros. The design is flawed whenever you ask for water the minute the unit kicks on you will get a push or TDS Cree getting through the membrane so the more it goes off and on off and on you will keep pushing TDS through the membrane lowering the quality of what's coming out of your tap. Membranes want a longer running time. If you have a tankless sorrow run it for about a glass of water dumped it then fill the next glass should be much better quality

    • @Chris-zu4es
      @Chris-zu4es 9 дней назад

      only reason is because he dont sell them. i love my tankless I measure my PPM and it's 15 with tankless you can't get outer water. plus it's 10 times faster to deliver water than one with a tank

  • @GEMSGuy
    @GEMSGuy 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic content thanks for educating us

  • @amathisiplasma
    @amathisiplasma 7 месяцев назад +5

    Which one to buy?

  • @angelsong119
    @angelsong119 10 месяцев назад

    Our water comes from a municipal well which filters through lava rock (we live in Idaho, so, we live on a large lava bed.) Very interesting to know that minerals are removed and can be added back in.

  • @Faith9120
    @Faith9120 10 месяцев назад

    what is the cartridge for adding back in the minerals on the traditional RO?

  • @Presidentialrun2028
    @Presidentialrun2028 Месяц назад

    So mine is mainly for espresso. I’ll need some sort of remineralization for it. Any tips would be great. Thanks.

  • @Sylvan_dB
    @Sylvan_dB Год назад +6

    The standard filters and housings may be more effort to maintain, but as you earlier mentioned being environmentally conscious... The standard filter unit creates much less waste during routine maintenance, and if repairs are needed being able to replace just the broken component is much less wasteful.
    An R.O. system can be really cheap or a lot more efficient. My R.O. system produces less than 1 gallon of "waste" for each gallon of product at less than 10 TDS when I run long cycles. I think that's pretty good.
    I'm on a well, with good water at 40-60 PSI pressure. My RO system uses standard 2.5x10 prefilters and an inline post filter (that I've wondered about switching out for a standard housing but the inline lasts a long time). I have a booster pump and a second RO membrane ("staged concentrate") to increase efficiency for a very small increase in TDS. As I'm still well under 10 TDS output, that seems fine. The concentrate goes into my condensate sump where it gets pumped out onto the lawn. I think my next improvement is a non-pressurized storage tank with a distribution pump. Maybe at least 10 up to 20 gallon tank that starts the R.O. when it is about 3/4 empty to automate running long cycles. A first flush addon might also be nice so the initial high TDS output ("TDS creep") would go with the concentrate instead of into the product tank.

    • @todd77777
      @todd77777 Год назад

      Would you mind to share any specifics about your system? I'm interested in installing one as well and would prefer the more traditional type with standard filter sizes.

    • @Sylvan_dB
      @Sylvan_dB Год назад +1

      @@todd77777 I started with the rock bottom cheapest I could find on amazon that looked like (and it did) use standard filters and housings. Expect to pay US$100 to $150. Then I learned more and added on as I identified areas to improve. As I am on a well with variable water pressure, I think the biggest/most important improvement was the booster pump. I tried a "permeate pump" and it didn't seem to do much, especially with the booster pump, so it is now sitting in a box.
      If you wanted to start with something more pre-made, I'd investigate iSpring and APEC products. I don't have either of them, but they seem like decent quality, supported "generic" equipment.
      For more independent learning, the salt water fish hobbiests do a lot with reverse osmosis, and I found Bulk Reef Supply to be useful. Note you do not need or want deionization (DI) for drinking water so focus on the reverse osmosis (RO) part of the RODI systems.

    • @todd77777
      @todd77777 Год назад

      Thank you!! After reading your prior comment, I was looking at an "11" stage Express Water system, which appears to be a 7 stage with creative marketing. Claimed output is 100 GPD. iSpring and APEC appear to have similar systems marked 75 GPD for $40-$70 more. Do you believe they are significantly different? I read elsewhere that reminerialization can be hit-and-miss. Do you have any experience with that?

    • @Sylvan_dB
      @Sylvan_dB Год назад +3

      @@todd77777 Express Water systems seem very similar to me. I'd probably never use the company support, so personally I'd go for cheap. I'm skeptical of the added stages...
      I've looked at a lot of "remineralization filters" but I've not added one. Not sure I can trust what will be added, if anything, by clay balls and rocks - isn't that the same kind of stuff my water already went thru? What, exactly, will end up in my water?
      As for all the stages... Some have a specific purpose, while others are secondary/backup and maybe optional. Some are more decorative. 4 or 5 stages are the basic:
      * The reverse osmosis membrane is the special bit. It needs protected against chlorine and other contaminates
      * a carbon filter provides a lot of protection, so one goes before the membrane
      * maybe: if your water has chlorine (i.e. most city water) you require at least one really good or probably better add a second carbon filter before the membrane
      * Carbon filters are expensive, so a cheap particulate (sediment) filter before the carbon can help the carbon work better, longer
      * Sometimes the water going thru the RO membrane and in the storage tank will pick up a bit of a plastic smell/taste. A carbon filter on the way out to the faucet will remove that
      That's why on generic systems you see 3 filter canisters (pre-filters, sediment, carbon, carbon), a larger, more tubular (has 3 water lines) that holds the RO, then a smaller tubular for the final "polish" carbon filter.
      You could start with a 3 stage filter system. Decide if you really need RO. Or if you choose RO now, in a year or two when the RO membranes wear out you could decide that just the 3 stage filtering is enough and bypass the RO and output filter.

    • @sabeelhoneycom
      @sabeelhoneycom 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you @sylvan-db . Useful info. I understand that generic systems are desired but after researching so many Generic brands and even more expensive are hideous about their certifications most important thing which this video leaves out. Only Aquasana is more upfront about filters but their undersink RO smart flow sucks

  • @LarryB-inFL
    @LarryB-inFL 6 месяцев назад

    A good video. Some comments:
    You point out that waste water is an environmental concern, but miss the extreme wastefulness of quick replace cartridges having a big plastic housing that is one time use.
    Glad you pointed out the (ridiculous!) extra costs of the proprietary filters...I am dealing with that with my Whirlpool, and they have gotten so expensive that I am throwing the system out and starting over!!!!

  • @Jay-Still
    @Jay-Still Год назад +5

    Why do you say stay away from tankless RO syatems

  • @Marco-xz7rf
    @Marco-xz7rf 2 месяца назад

    I can only tell you from using these myself. Get one of these quick-changers. I just bought an "upgrade" for just 20€ (3 quickfilterholder with 3 filters pre-installed, new pipes and faucet) for my old system (looked like the black one on the right side) because it was SUCH A PAIN to change and clean. I never changed after 6 month, i always waited more than a year because it is SO DAMN ANNOYING. The filters for my new system are like 3 - 5€ with is nothing when you can use them for like 6 month and the change is just SECONDS and no water spilling anywhere, no open filter that is contaminated from the beginning, no hassle with h202 and hard to clean plastics. Also i heard these outside screw filters get brittle after a while and will eventually fail at the o-rings or whatever.

  • @danielhigle6590
    @danielhigle6590 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for all the awesome info!

    • @anthonyrstrawbridge
      @anthonyrstrawbridge 8 месяцев назад

      His assumption is biased on two things: 1) Faucet and running water 2) RO Membrane Flow Rating.
      Many people don't want or need the RO water on demand with the Faucet supplying running water. A large 100 GPD membrane can supply .07 GPM/0.25LPM😊 That said, in just 4-5 minutes it will provide an overflowing litre easily. I cook a lot and need approximately 7-9 gallons on hand for boiling and rinsing the spaghetti. Quite frankly I got tired of lifting buckets long ago. I use stainless steel Kegs from the brewery to build both my cold water and hot water storage tanks. I live without heat in a freezing climate. My interior temperature dips below -35f / -37c , so I need to drain back plumbing and pumps, bottle water and store in refrigerator etc.. The drains freeze solid too so I put antifreeze in and wait for warmer days because once the drains freeze it can take three months above 33f/0c to unthaw😊 them.

  • @van123446
    @van123446 4 месяца назад +10

    what about nano and micro plastics coming off this big jungle of plastic parts.

  • @angelsong119
    @angelsong119 10 месяцев назад +1

    Which system would you recommend for a home with 3 people. Daily, we would only be using purified water for 12 cups of coffee and another gallon per day for drinking.
    Our water is metered and comes from a small municipal well.
    I would like to invest in a high quality system that will be easily serviceable by the company who manufacturers it. There is an ample amount of space under the sink.
    Thank you.

    • @SoulStar47
      @SoulStar47 4 месяца назад

      That's a lot of acidic coffee per day. 😳

  • @Fr4nkSanchez
    @Fr4nkSanchez Год назад +1

    Do I need a sediment and carbon filter (aka 3stage filter) for my RO system if I already have a wholehouse filter? I was thiking that question so technically I can only run stage 4-6 and reduce cost?

  • @PLA5207
    @PLA5207 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very helpful. TY

  • @ednavas8093
    @ednavas8093 11 месяцев назад +2

    love this video!

  • @SteveC-pk4io
    @SteveC-pk4io 8 месяцев назад

    Good video, lots of info. What would make RO system spit air before the water a few times a month?

  • @Z4r4kiKenpachi
    @Z4r4kiKenpachi Год назад

    Hi , how many carbon filter do we need in prefilter. Many product uses two carbon filter. Is single carbon filter enough?

  • @ee7369
    @ee7369 5 месяцев назад

    I’m getting a countertop RO. It’s just about 30$ difference adding the UV to it. I live in a city and I don’t think bacteria is an issue, but for the $30 price would it be worth it getting with UV protection? Any negative that could out of the UV? Like radiation etc?

  • @mikechapin5669
    @mikechapin5669 7 месяцев назад

    Yeah the standard cartridges are much cheaper and easy to acquire but have you ever seen one filter housing blowout cracked from being aged I'm having to replace o-rings or lubricate o-rings with the proprietary cartridge you get all new filter media and the housing and new o-rings on the cartridge so every year you're replacing the parts that stress. You're sacrificing quality with the permeate pump. You're getting TDS creep in the storage tank. So that's a trade-off. I'm not going to say the name of the white one on the left but I have used that unit for 30 years it is the most dependable reverse osmosis system I have ever seen in 30 years and still today is an icon of quality. Now the price we can definitely argue about

  • @BilliamBikes
    @BilliamBikes 10 месяцев назад

    Is this a whole home unit? If not is there one you recommend?

  • @AirborneSapper82
    @AirborneSapper82 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent Video Sir !!!!! Thank you very much !!!!

  • @KerwinWilliams-h4f
    @KerwinWilliams-h4f 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the information

  • @lowridingtrucks88
    @lowridingtrucks88 Год назад +2

    Confused as heck , just want one that family can use for clean water daily with filter cost to a minimum. Anyone?

    • @Freshwatersystems
      @Freshwatersystems  Год назад +3

      We would recommend the Neo-Pure PRO-4 Residential RO system. You can find it linked in the description!

    • @lowridingtrucks88
      @lowridingtrucks88 Год назад

      @@Freshwatersystems Thank You

  • @lyleburns8532
    @lyleburns8532 Год назад +2

    Can't we get all the minerals we need from our food if we're eating whole real food?

    • @trueNeogenian
      @trueNeogenian Год назад +1

      Yes we get what we need from food. It's also bad to have too much water as well. The old 8 glasses a day is actually bs. You just drink what you need. Not part of what you were asking but figured it was helpful info.

    • @PammieWW
      @PammieWW 9 месяцев назад +1

      If I push myself to drink 2litres a day I just feel better. I do no a bit more self discipline tho 🫢😂

  • @titaniummaster1532
    @titaniummaster1532 2 месяца назад +1

    Made in USA?

  • @Chris-zu4es
    @Chris-zu4es 9 дней назад

    only reason he say dont but tankless is because he dont sell them. i love my ro system its tankless an about 10 times faster to fill a gallon than the ine with a tank

  • @LouiseLLee
    @LouiseLLee 10 месяцев назад

    Don’t understand why so many think you need to add minerals to your water. When in reality, water is meant too hydrate, food is where we get our minerals!

    • @OrficeMagmar
      @OrficeMagmar 3 месяца назад

      If your water doesn’t have minerals you will die

    • @armandojberrios
      @armandojberrios 2 месяца назад +1

      @@OrficeMagmar 😂

  • @Petermcnaughtonhomes
    @Petermcnaughtonhomes Год назад +24

    You loose a lot of credibility when you say,"stay away from the tankless" and give no reasons. It sounds like you have no way to compete against it. Please supply fact based reasons not to buy a tankless system. Maybe a separate video and link pinned to the top.

    • @Fr4nkSanchez
      @Fr4nkSanchez Год назад +4

      But it is a potential failure, since it is proprietary is not easy to do maintenance, no upgradability, cost of filters are higher. Most are made overseas and create leaks. It has a good principle since uses the same principle as the fridges but you can replace regular filters with $30 dlls against a minimum of $75 dlls for a 5 stage filter, it is not much but still is not worth the price. I still think it is more practical, I have the home master inline filters and it is a game changer, easier to replace the filter

    • @JoeBarbagallo
      @JoeBarbagallo Год назад +2

      Spot on. I am only considering tankless and it is the future. Few have the space to contain all of the mass and patience for the maintenance a tank based system comes with.

    • @Fr4nkSanchez
      @Fr4nkSanchez Год назад

      @@JoeBarbagallo If I upgraded mine probably will be a tankless. What I like about mine is the uses a permeate pump that does not require electricity and in a power outage I still have water not sure if tankless works the same. I still have some bottles of water as a backup

    • @Guffy99
      @Guffy99 Год назад +1

      I believe RO process results in slow flow. Tank stores the RO water so the flow is faster and you don’t have to wait ages to fill a glass.

    • @bernardinotorres4182
      @bernardinotorres4182 Год назад

      @@Fr4nkSanchezwhat’s the name of your system champ?

  • @nicholaspeters6127
    @nicholaspeters6127 Год назад +1

    what the fuck is that annoying sound in the background. god damn.

  • @thebadhack1049
    @thebadhack1049 Год назад

    Wish people would stop hyping RO systems
    Let people do their own research to figure out what they need