Essentially but not all. That's where the DI comes in.Copper or brass (mainly copper) pipes after water softener is bad for our reef tank. Soft water is essentially slightly salted water. The salt will corrode the copper tube and will give high copper in the water. Still a good maintain RO system will remove essentially all copper from the water.
Did you know that natural sea water contain about 10 ppm of copper? (about 10 mg per cubic meter of water).
I use tab water in my office tank to mix salt water for years without problem. I do use RO for top off water in that tank.
DI is not needed for reef tank.
Certainly in the OP RO/DI out put of 2 ppm is not a problem, nor it cause high nitrates in his tank.
There is nothing misleading about it. We know that freshly mixed, completely dissolved salt water at right salinity and temperature is toxic to animal life. It is though that part of this toxicity is the heavy metal in it is not completely chelated. A lot of the copper are chelated and detoxified in our tank, they also take up by various organisms and plants (which required them for health)
My point is that copper is not a killer ion that you need to keep at 0.
I guess we just have to agree that we disagree
I'm not suggesting that my RODI is my nitrate issue either. A LFS near me, who services tanks said on a scale of 1-5 my RODI output is a 3. I'm aware at my issue is multi leveled. 30 fish in the tank, 4 cubes a day, no skimmer for 2 years to name just a few. My skimmer is now online and working great, I'm dosing carbon and getting this under control. My original question was to check the validity of the LFS suggestion as it seemed strange to me that my 2 reading output could be such an issue.
Corey
Your RODI is not the problem...
mechanically removing algae and detritus from your tank combined with water changes and an operational skimmer will effectively lower your nitrates and provide overall better conditions for your fish.
however any copper or other medications you put in your tank will be removed by your skimmer.