I was reading through the maintenance part of the manual and it said that increasing TDS can be caused by a dirty tank and that every 6 months or so that you should clean the tank out, I drained it and cleaned it out and it went down to a TDS of 16. The water coming out of the feed line was 14, i didn't check that the first time around, I just stuck the meter in the tank.
Yes - test the TDS of the RO water BEFORE it reaches any storage tank. Install a sampling port, or easier yet, install an inline TDS meter.
When should you replace an RO membrane? Use a TDS meter to measure, record, and track the TDS in at least two places: 1) RO feedwater, and 2) after the RO but before any tank.
The TDS in your RO system feedwater will likely range from about 50 ppm to upwards of 1000 ppm. Common readings are 100 to 400 ppm. So for sake of discussion, let's say your tap water reads 400 ppm. That means that for every million parts of water, you have 400 parts of dissolved solids. How do we go about getting that TDS reading down to somewhere that won't spot?
If you do some experimenting with your TDS meter, you'll see that your prefilter equipment (e.g., softener, carbon filter, sediment filter) do very little to remove dissolved solids. So with your tap water at 400 ppm, you can measure the water at the “in” port on your RO membrane housing and you'll see it is still approximately 400 ppm.
The RO membrane is really the workhorse of the system. It removes most of the TDS, some membranes to a greater extent than others. Check the specs on any membrane for its stated "rejection rate." You'll see a number like 96% or 98% or 99% (i.e., the membrane should reject 96+% of the dissolved solids in the feed water). So the purified water coming from your membrane would be about 16 ppm (a 96% reduction). Or 400 * 0.04 = 16. If the TDS of the feedwater is higher, then the TDS of the RO water will also be higher.
Membranes can function well for up to a year, two years, or more. The lifespan is dramatically affected by the quality of the pretreatment. Commonly the pretreatment consists of a backwashing carbon tank to treat chlorine or chloramine, and a softener to remove hardness. If you allow either (chlorine or hardness) to reach your membranes, their lifespan will be reduced. We worked with an industrial customer recently who was changing membranes out every two weeks. He had very hard water, no softener, and had the concentrate flow set way too low.
Russ