I believe it takes 4 gallons of water for 1 gallon R/O. Quick math from the bottled water usage was 3 gallons per day. So waste water ~~12 gal per day. What do you think? Edit, maybe it was 5 gallons raw for 1 gal R/O....
wow...yes , that is worth reclaiming for the garden!!! I never would have guessed it "wasted" that much. Could you dump that back into the cistern to be reclaimed for wash water?
on reclaiming. What an interesting idea to dump back into cistern! Although the cistern feeds the whole house, not just wash water. We do not have a well, (too hard, alkaline, and salty). And of course, we do not have gutters either
1" of rain on a 1000 square foot roof could give you 600 gallons of water http://www.rainbarrelguide.com/how-much-water-can-you-collect-in-rain-barrels-during-a-rainfall/ thats 400 flushes. lol or 15 long (hot) showers... (I know that got your attention)
Not easily, the cistern in underground beneath my living room floor. What are your thoughts on routing drain water back to the cistern?
You could. It's just going to have a lot more total dissolved solids in it. Is the cistern just used for showers toilets and tap water?
showers/toilets/kitchen and bathroom sinks/washing machine/clothes washer/one hose (that we dont use LOL). One line from cistern coming into the house that is then distributed for everything here.
not sure how much water you use from the RO, but if the waste was reclaimed back to the cistern it would only add 2-3% of dissolved solids (DS) back per week. (depending on total water usage) If the water going into the RO is potable then the waste is probably still potable, with just a higher % of DS. If you are using the RO to make the water potable, the waste is probably not worth reclaiming, unless its just for watering trees and the garden. I guess in the end it would be ok to reclaim if there was a serious shortage. But then the cost of repiping to the cistern may be the determining factor
Ro's are definitely well worth the cost . I've used one for drinking water for the house since the mid 90's and also use one for my maple syrup business. We have a very high tds ( total dissolved solids) from the well. Lots of salt ! How much " waste " you get all depends on the quality of water feeding the ro. How fast you make ro water is all about pressure. I use a small booster pump on my house ro to boost pressure to 80 psi. Wildwest, If your finding that you run out of ro water occasionally adding a simple booster pump will help alot. The maple sap ro is a whole different can of worms. What I do is take maple sap which is on average 2-3% sugar and run it thru a 40" ro membrane at 180-250 psi . This will increase my sugar to 4-6% and at the same time remove 1/2 of the water. So say I collect 600 gallons of sap in the morning , first thing I do is run it thru the ro and I will only have 300 gallons of sap left but at a much higher sugar content. What I'm doing is saving the " waste " to boil but I also save the "permeate " which has zero sugar and is the best tasting water you have ever had. I also use this permeate for general cleaning in the sugarhouse. Sorry to run off topic a bit but thought some of you might find this interesting.
not just interesting. brilliant! I think my wife would love this maple water as a drink. she doesn't drink 'Plain' water. usually flavored bottled water or puts a splenda in it
Yes, potable going in, my concern is the tank on the pickup and the cistern here.....Both old and I don't trust they are sanitary. The pickup holds ~~400 gallons, cistern is ~~1200 gallon capacity, I would guess the turnover is pretty high. I LOVE my new big jetted bathtub that I shower in, lots of room for me, problem is it takes SOOOO much water to fill it up to the jets (jets are a must for the lil one's bubble baths ). Long story short, I like the idea! And, plumbing $$ is simply running the 3/8" plastic discharge hose under the floor. Under the floor would be the hardest part.
sounds like you need spouting and a system to fill the cistern. then sanitize the cistern. free/soft water when it rains.