Hi gldnegle76,
Yes sometimes the easiest thing for "new ro/di owner syndrome" is to just mount the drain line into your sink drain and never look at it. I know it's depressing but it's more psychological and anything else.
That's a fantastic rejection rate and you should be able to retain it for long time as long as you continue to maintain the unit with fresh prefilters ect. This probably has very little to due with the fact that the unit is new but rather, you just got a really good membrane and you must have decent input water pressure I'm guessing. These membranes will keep their efficiency for many many years. Mine is about 6 yrs old and has not changed much. I once got a membrane with a rejection rate in the very low 90s out of the box. Randy Holmes Farhley in the Chem forum had his for 10 yrs so congrats.
One last thing. This website shows what will be removed and what will pass right through a carbon prefilter to help us determine what you might actually be concentrating in the RO waste line. I'm not familiar with these people or if they have an ulterior motive but it's all I could find on short notice via google. I was curious about this myself.
http://www.home-water-purifiers-and-filters.com/carbon-water-filter.php
The list of metals that will pass right through your carbon filter according to them is.
antimony
arsenic
asbestos
barium
beryllium
cadmium
chromium
copper
fluoride
mercury
nickel
nitrates/nitrites
selenium
sulfate
thallium
and certain radio nuclides
So this is a rough list of what we can assume will be concentrated by about 25% (from initial concentration) in your waste water. Your local treatment facility is probably trying hard to keep these low so they aren't likely common. However I wouldn't use this stuff for my family. Not worth it. If you want to reduce them from your tap water, drink the permeate not the waste.
FB
Now you do have you ask yourself a question, what kind of water are you drinking now?
1. Tap water (boiled or straight from the tap)
2. Regular house-hold filtered water (e.g. Brita)
3. RO/DI pre-filtered water rejected by RO membrane
4. Bottled water
5. RO/DI filtered water from your RO/DI unit
6. Bottled mineral water
For those of you answered # 1-3, you're pretty much drinking the same thing. Granted #3 you'll have slightly more TDS than #1 and #2, but do you really know what's in that TDS?
It could be left over heavy metal that the GAC didn't absorb, or it could be minerals that's beneficial to your body.
For those of you answered # 4-5, you're drinking purified water, stripped of all heavy metals and containmates, but also minerals.
There're some research studies suggest that human body must absorb certain amount of mineral through water to sustain, so some folks would re-minerialize their purified water, but there're also some studies that say otherwise.
That's also the topic I've discusses with the folks at AquaFX during last MACNA about drinking pure RO/DI or bottled water.
For me, I've been drinking pre-filtered water for years - since the early days Brita type, which turns out to have absolutely zero effect on TDS after I tested it with a TDS meter, and I've since then switched to RO/DI pre-filtered water.
Granted, I'm not drinking a lot of water from that source since I dine outside mostly and most of my liquid intake is from bottled soft-drinks or likewise, so I know having just a cup of such water every now and then, isn't going to kill me. :rollface: