When to change Rodi cartridges

Noldi76

New Member
View Badges
Joined
May 30, 2020
Messages
15
Reaction score
24
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hi guys,

i have a 4 Stage rodi. Carbon, sediment, membrane and resin. Tap Water is 128 tds. Post carbon/sediment around 118. Post membrane is 1 tds and post resin is 0 tds. What number is a good indicator when I should change certain cartridges in your opinion? The manufacturer recommends a particular time frame for each cartridge, but I think it would be wasteful to just switch out the cartridge when it turns out that it’s still perfectly fine.
 

Spare time

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 12, 2019
Messages
12,149
Reaction score
9,782
Location
Here
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
For the sediment, change it when the pressure drops (you need an inline pressure gauge for this but they are cheap)

For the carbon, you can use chlorine strips on the water water to see if chlorine is getting through. However, since most people don't test that regularly (understandably), many just replace it early when they replace the sediment cartridge.

For the RO membrane, change it when the TDS starts to go up into the DI resin. Be sure to flush, preferably before you start to collect water to use

For DI resin, change just before the color indication says it is completely used up. If it is not color changing, change as soon as TDS increases. Make sure to use a bypass for flushing to avoid burning through DI resin like paper on fire.
 
OP
OP
Noldi76

Noldi76

New Member
View Badges
Joined
May 30, 2020
Messages
15
Reaction score
24
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
For the sediment, change it when the pressure drops (you need an inline pressure gauge for this but they are cheap)

For the carbon, you can use chlorine strips on the water water to see if chlorine is getting through. However, since most people don't test that regularly (understandably), many just replace it early when they replace the sediment cartridge.

For the RO membrane, change it when the TDS starts to go up into the DI resin. Be sure to flush, preferably before you start to collect water to use

For DI resin, change just before the color indication says it is completely used up. If it is not color changing, change as soon as TDS increases. Make sure to use a bypass for flushing to avoid burning through DI resin like paper on fire.
Thanks for the quick response. I have pressure meter before the unit already to adjust pressure going into the unit (60psi recommended). So based on your recommendation, I'd need a second one after the sediment filter to be able to register the change in pressure. Do you agree?
Also, I have been flushing the system prior to use. But how long do you actually flush for? I would assume as long as it takes for tds to drop until it stabilizes . Or am I wrong?
 

Spare time

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 12, 2019
Messages
12,149
Reaction score
9,782
Location
Here
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Thanks for the quick response. I have pressure meter before the unit already to adjust pressure going into the unit (60psi recommended). So based on your recommendation, I'd need a second one after the sediment filter to be able to register the change in pressure. Do you agree?
Also, I have been flushing the system prior to use. But how long do you actually flush for? I would assume as long as it takes for tds to drop until it stabilizes . Or am I wrong?

You want to have the pressure gauge after the sediment and carbon and before the RO membrane. You can move your current one to that spot.

As for flushing, a minute is usually enough, but its really just whenever the TDS going into the DI resin / DI bypass stops dropping (it will rise dramatically and then fall down).
 
OP
OP
Noldi76

Noldi76

New Member
View Badges
Joined
May 30, 2020
Messages
15
Reaction score
24
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
You want to have the pressure gauge after the sediment and carbon and before the RO membrane. You can move your current one to that spot.

As for flushing, a minute is usually enough, but its really just whenever the TDS going into the DI resin / DI bypass stops dropping (it will rise dramatically and then fall down).
But how do you tell if the pressure is dropping in the sediment filter if you only have one pressure gauge? You have nothing to compare it to. Keep in mind I am manually adjusting the valve going to the RO unit to 60PSI. So if the pressure is higher or lower in the building, i'd be adjusting the valve accordingly. That's not a constant. What do you k ow that I don't?
 

mdb_talon

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 6, 2010
Messages
4,938
Reaction score
7,756
Location
Illinois
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Change prefilters(carbon/sediment) frequently) is the cost effective way. They are cheap and can significantly increase life of more expensive RO. A decent RO should last at least a couple years for average hobbyist. DI i change based off color(though occassionally i test TDS just to confirm it is good.
 

Spare time

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 12, 2019
Messages
12,149
Reaction score
9,782
Location
Here
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
But how do you tell if the pressure is dropping in the sediment filter if you only have one pressure gauge? You have nothing to compare it to. Keep in mind I am manually adjusting the valve going to the RO unit to 60PSI. So if the pressure is higher or lower in the building, i'd be adjusting the valve accordingly. That's not a constant. What do you k ow that I don't?
Having one before the sediment is only useful if your buidling's water pressure fluctuates. If it does then go ahead and do that.

This is the video I reference for pressure gauges
 
Back
Top