How to test for chloramine

ostrow

It's Dr. Goodluck Himself
A number of factors have lead me to order a Hach test kit.

Some test the ro waste water. I don't get why. Others test faucet. Others the output from membrane.

What is the right answer here?
 
I don't know why test the waste water. I don't care what's in that. It goes down the drain. I can understand testing the faucet to see if there's anything to be concerned about.
I did not see any Hach that tests for chloramine.
 
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I would test the water that I intend to use, which generally is the output, not the waste water. I might test the tap water as a sort of sanity test on the test kit itself.
 
I would test the water that I intend to use, which generally is the output, not the waste water. I might test the tap water as a sort of sanity test on the test kit itself.

Makes sense, thanks.

Reading more some say chloramine can kill ro membranes fast and I have had to change mine like every 18mo.

So maybe I should test at the input to the membrane (out of the booster pump)?
 
Membranes that could be damaged by chloramines should have a carbon phase before the membrane itself. I don't think that the membrane should have much trouble if the filter has prefilters that are changed on a reasonable schedule, but it's hard to know what's in everyone's tap water. Some membranes are fine with chlorine (the actual chemical that damages other membranes). I think that most of those are made with TFC, but I am forgetting my acronyms. What membrane is in your system?
 
I have a Dow Filmtec 75, with 2x carbon blocks in front of it. I swap the oldest and rotate up every 3mos or so. The cartridges are from one of the regular suppliers (I think these are from h20 or air/water/ice. One of those.)
 
Anyway total chlorine tested 0 out of booster pump.

I am not sure what the difference is with "free" but will test that soon.
 
I'm not sure what's killing your membranes, then. A water source with a lot of metals and some carbonate might do that. In that situation, an ion-exchange filter can help, although it might not be worth the cost.
 
Another question is how much preasure is the booster pump puting out might actualy be to high causing the dammage
 
I'm not sure what's killing your membranes, then. A water source with a lot of metals and some carbonate might do that. In that situation, an ion-exchange filter can help, although it might not be worth the cost.

Well it's Chicago. Out water is pretty good. TDS of the source is only like 173. And if this were the case there would be hundreds of such problems from others.
 
Test tap water for reference, test membrane output for confidence of system.
A water report from the water supplier should tell you if they use chlorinates.
Usually available online.
 
OK so "total chlorine" measured 0. "Free chlorine" measured 1.4/5 = about 0.3

Hach CN-70 kit.

It is the water post-carbon going into the membrane.

I could not find a good explanation of total vs free carbon or whether this level is something I must address. Anyone know?
 
Sorry, I am behind on posting. I've been dealing with a mild health problem.

I am confused. I don't know how total chlorine could be zero, but there is free chlorine. I'll try to take a look at the test kit description. What are the units on the measurements?
 
Yeah I don't think it can be. Likely both zero or close enough that my search is best elsewhere.
 
Free chlorine reading, by definition, cannot be higher than total chlorine. Anyhow, if your water at the point of measurement contained chloramine, your total chlorine reading wouldn't be zero. Hence, there has to be something else causing premature membrane failure.
 
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