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PRODUCT INFORMATION

RO Reverse Osmosis Pure Water System (800 GPD) Commercial

Product Information

RO Reverse Osmosis Pure Water System (800 GPD) Commercial

This product utilizes a high-efficiency reverse osmosis membrane to filter tap or well water to produce low total dissolved solids water for consumer use. Can be used in restaurants, cafes, bubble tea shops, laboratories, various other applications.

feature of product

Special backflow design, compared with traditional RO machine, can save water efficiency up to 50% or more

Special ultra-low pressure RO membrane, 800GPD (4021 x 1 piece), large flow rate, fast water production, energy saving and environmental protection

Small size, does not occupy space, easy installation, easy maintenance and replacement

 

Product Specifications

Design flow: 800GPD/3,000LPD

Influent TDS condition: < 1,000 ppm (mg/l)

Recovery rate: 60%

Removal rate: 98%

RO Membrane Size/ Quantity: 4021*1

RO pump type: pump head + 1/2HP motor

TDS display controller: water quality status can be seen

Package size: L120 x W50 x H20 cm

Packing weight: 25 kg

 

basic configuration

Stainless steel main frame, open configuration, easy maintenance

RO shell adopts stainless steel high pressure tube shell

The operating pressure regulating valve adopts SUS 316 pressure regulating valve to precisely control the amount of pure/wastewater

Motor overload protection control device

The control system adopts microcomputer program control (automatic detection of thirsty water / water production / full water protection device)

TDS liquid crystal display controller: water quality status can be seen

下載 PDF

此產品利用高效率逆滲透膜,過濾自來水或井水進而可產生低總溶解固體之水質,供消費者使用。可應用於餐廳,咖啡廳,泡沫紅茶店,實驗室,各種各樣的其他應用。技術講解

How to choose a 250–9000GPD "pure water machine"? First, let's consider... GPD Just treat it as a "car manufacturer's fuel consumption label".

Many people choose water purifiers and immediately focus on models with capacities of 250, 1000, or 9000 GPD—but a more accurate assessment is:GPD is mostly "ideal product water under standard conditions"..
Membrane specifications typically specify the test conditions clearly, such as 25°C (77°F), specific pressure, and specific recovery rate (the same membrane will produce different results under different conditions). Think of it like a fuel consumption label; it makes perfect sense.The fuel consumption of the same vehicle will vary depending on whether it is going uphill or downhill, in winter or summer, or with different loads.

The most common problem encountered on-site, "insufficient water production," is usually not due to machine malfunction, but rather these factors that reduce water production:
Water temperature, pressure, recovery rate, raw water quality (TDS/hardness/colloids/metals/residual chlorine, etc.).
The water temperature is particularly noticeable.It's normal for water production to decrease slightly for every few degrees the water temperature drops.Winter often means "the same machine, two different lives".


Step 1: First, intuitively convert 250–9000 GPD into "per hour/per minute".

What you really need to grasp is... Peak water usage:
Do you use it slowly throughout the day, or do you use it rapidly in a short period of 10 minutes? This will determine whether you choose direct output, water storage, or a combination.

GPD (Gross Productivity) of a Pure Water Machine Approximate water production (L/day) Approximately continuous water production (L/hour) Approximate average flow rate (L/minute) Intuitive advice (water discharge strategy)
250 946 39.4 0.66 It's almost always necessary to use a water tank (you'll be very breathless if you go straight out).
500 1893 78.9 1.31 Water storage tank + stable low-flow direct output
750 2839 118.3 1.97 Demand is stable and can be met directly; however, water storage is still recommended during peak periods.
1000 3785 157.7 2.63 Small direct output is fine; peak/continuous water use with water storage is more reliable.
1500 5678 236.6 3.94 Direct output + buffer tank (like adding a "reservoir")
2000 7571 315.5 5.26 Direct output is preferred; a buffer water tank is strongly recommended.
3000 11356 473.2 7.89 Almost all of them will be equipped with direct output + water tank + automatic water replenishment.
4500 17034 709.8 11.83 Direct output + water tank + voltage regulator/frequency converter, more like an industrial configuration.
6000 22712 946.4 15.77 Piping, emissions, and backup systems all need to be considered from an "engineering" perspective.
9000 34069 1419.5 23.66 Industrial small system level: Water tank, CIP, and monitoring are basically required.

A friendly reminder: This is a "continuous average" concept. Actual water production will fluctuate depending on water temperature, pressure, and recovery rate, and is usually more challenging in winter.
If the manufacturer provides a temperature correction chart or TCF (Temperature Correction Factor), be sure to use it to check your lowest water temperature.


Step 2: You are actually choosing between "direct output" and "water storage".

Choosing a water purifier is similar to choosing a meal service mode:

  • Direct output typeFor on-demand processing, the equipment must be able to handle peak demand (pumps, membranes, pressure, and recovery rates all need to keep up).
  • Water storage typeLike a central kitchen, ingredients are prepared first, peak flow is released through the water tank, and the water purifier replenishes it gradually.

In short: the sharper the peak, the more water tank is needed.
If you have a bursty demand like "equipment cleaning, instant water replenishment, and filling", ray tracing GPD can easily exceed your budget, and the result is still unstable.

Quick Decision Table: First, select a water strategy using "water usage pattern".
Your water usage patterns Common Situations Recommended water discharge strategy Important Reminder
Stable and continuous Laboratory hydration, small-scale use in continuous processes Direct output or small water tank buffer Is it still sufficient when monitoring the lowest water temperature and lowest pressure?
Spike pulse Cleaning, filling, and concentrated water use during certain periods Water tank capacity expansion + RO inventory replenishment Water tank capacity is generally more cost-effective and stable than "buying more GPD".
Long-term high load Multi-shift system, continuous water intake of production line Direct output + water tank + voltage regulator/frequency converter Initially, the piping, drainage, and backup systems should be treated as a single project.

Step 3: First look at the raw water. Focusing solely on GDP without considering the raw water is like buying a truck without checking the road conditions.

Is the reverse osmosis water purifier stable?The part before the membraneOften, this determines 80% of the final product. For raw water, at least these factors "directly affect membrane life and product water":

Key factors of raw water What problems will this cause? Common countermeasures (directions)
Residual chlorine/oxidant The membrane is easily damaged, and the desalination rate decreases. Dechlorination with activated carbon or chemicals, ORP/residual chlorine monitoring
SDI/Turbidity/Particulates Membrane blockage, increased pressure differential, and drop in permeate flow. Multi-media filtration, filter cartridge grading, and UF/MF addition when necessary.
Hardness/Silicon Recovery rate is stuck, and the risk of scaling increases. Softening, scale inhibition, segmented design, and control of concentration ratio
Metals such as iron, aluminum, and manganese Pollution, colloid/precipitation Oxidative filtration, iron and manganese removal, and pH/coagulation condition review
water temperature range Fluctuations in water production and changes in salt breakthrough trends Check GPD and TCF based on the lowest water temperature, and reserve for winter.

Literature or association materials often mention that increased temperature usually increases water production, but it may also increase salt penetration. If you are in a situation where conductivity/resistivity is very important, don't just be happy because "more water production" is achieved; quality must also be considered (for example, some educational materials from WQA often remind you of the impact of temperature on system performance).


Step 4: Calculate the influent and wastewater volumes using the "recovery rate" in one go.

Many people only realize this after they've bought it:Insufficient ground drainage, wastewater volume exceeding expectations, or raw water supply not keeping up..
Just memorize three lines of equations:

  • Water inflow = Water production ÷ Recovery rate
  • Concentrate/Discharge = Inflow rate - Production rate
  • Recovery rate = Production water ÷ Inflow water
Small examples (to give you an instant feel for it)
Target water production Set recovery rate Water needs to be introduced It will discharge concentrated water
1,000 L/h 50% 2,000 L/h 1,000 L/h
1,000 L/h 70% 1,429 L/h 429 L/h

Recovery rate isn't something you can just arbitrarily increase: the higher the recovery rate, the better.The higher the risk of scaling/contaminationMore often, staged design, scale inhibition strategies, or more complete pretreatment are needed; otherwise, the water you save may be returned by "membrane washing, shutdown, and membrane replacement".


Step 5: Different "pure water machine configurations" with the same GPD can vary greatly (these are the ones you should compare).

While both are rated at 1000GPD, the "ease of use" of manufacturers A and B can differ as much as two cars from different segments. When choosing a system, it's recommended to compare them based on their individual performance metrics:

  • Membrane elements and test conditionsSame as GPD, but different testing pressure/recovery rate, resulting in significant differences in field performance.
  • Temperature Correction Factor (TCF)Did you provide a set of calculation and comparison correction tables?
  • Preprocessing completeness: Sand, colloids, metals, hardness, silicon → Are the corresponding filtration/softening/chemical injection strategies in place?
  • Monitoring and ProtectionDifferential pressure, conductivity, low pressure/water shortage protection, flushing logic (these determine whether you're constantly putting out fires).
  • CIP/Maintenance FlowAt speeds above 3000 GPD, without proper cleaning and maintenance planning, they can easily become "trouble-making machines."

If you want to quickly find a typical membrane specification sheet format, you can look at DuPont's membrane product information (it will write the test conditions and performance descriptions in a very neat way, which is very convenient to use as a comparison template).


Quick Selection Method for 250–9000GPD Water Purifiers: Match the type to your needs

  • Demand is stable, use it slowly throughout the day.Choose a model that "slightly meets your immediate needs," and then use a small water tank for buffering.
  • Demand is very high (volume spikes at certain times).Prioritize "water tank capacity release," with the water purifier responsible for replenishing inventory.
  • You need higher purity (you need to connect to a mixed bed/EDI/UV system).First, stabilize the RO system (pretreatment, recovery rate, monitoring), then the subsequent stages will stabilize.

The 5 most common pitfalls (you'll usually fall into at least one of them)

  1. Looking only at GPD, ignoring test conditions(The numbers will not be the same if the temperature, pressure, and recovery rate change.)
  2. Insufficient water production in winter(TCF verification was not used at low water temperatures)
  3. In an attempt to save water by setting the recovery rate too high, scale buildup and constant membrane cleaning occurred.
  4. Preprocessing omitted(Sand, colloid, metal, hardness, silicon... all are ultimately counted on the membrane head)
  5. Emissions/ground discharge not calculated first(Only after purchasing did I realize that the concentrate volume exceeded the site conditions)

10-Second Self-Check Checklist (Prepare these 6 numbers, and choosing a water purifier will be much easier)

  • What you want Water production: L/day + Peak L/minute
  • raw water TDS / Hardness / Silicon / Iron, Manganese, Aluminum / Residual Chlorine(You can also check the hardness, residual chlorine, and TDS first.)
  • raw water water temperature range(What's the lowest temperature in winter?)
  • What you can accept Recovery rate(And emissions/ground discharge capacity)
  • What grade of effluent is required (pure RO? or RO + mixed bed/EDI/UV?)
  • you want Straight output,Water storage,still Direct output + water tank mixing?

Action Recommendation: To select the right specifications from the start, turn the "uncertain" into the "calculable".

If you are evaluating medium to high flow rates, or if you have peak water usage (cleaning, filling, replenishment), the easiest and most time-saving approach is not to keep replacing larger GPDs, but to put "discharge strategy + tank buffer + recovery rate + pretreatment" together on the same specification sheet, and the selection will suddenly become very clear.

Finally, if you're also working on softening/pretreatment and overall system stability (especially ensuring stable RO downstream quality), consider ATS's solutions to truly realize the principle of "stable upstream, stable downstream." To quickly align your scenario and needs, simply use their form to schedule a meeting and clarify your water usage patterns, raw water conditions, and target water quality all at once. This is usually more cost-effective than guessing specifications yourself.

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