| That's what I was thinking. This makes me think my system is less safe than I thought. BUMMER!! This poster's cost drop on the $2/5Gal made me go down the cost analysis train on my own system. I setup my own robust RO system at home and filter my own water. It uses a 20gal tank so the output is very high when demanded (slow regen, lots of storage). We use about 1400gal of drinking water from this system a year between 5 people and 3 pets (I filter their water too), filter media needs replacing every year. (1400/5)*2 = $560/yr cost if purchased water from "Whole Foods" which I don't have access to. I also use the water in the winter for humidifier units, so that probably boosts my usage a lot. Filter replacement costs are ~$80 per year plus the RO membrane every 5yrs (80/5)
80+16 = $96 per year on media... let's just call it $100 to add margin for o-rings replacement or other tooling or random things. 560 - 100 = $460 savings over "Whole Foods"!! Neat! Not counting the convenience costs too. Original investment for the system: $580. Break-even in a bit over 1 year doesn't seem bad. Its been 4 years since I started doing this, so it seems like I am well ahead already. Input water cost is minimal, I pump ground water so there's no cost other than electricity. There are other costs to my water treatment system that I won't include in the "drinking water" category since that's whole home. I also treat for iron/arsenic, which was a 1.8k filter and costs ~$80 in reagents per year. |
I like your evaluation here, not criticizing it. But I'm curious about adding the costs for time/material/travel to your costs.
For me, I'm not going to run a RO system because I can beat the cost against Whole Foods. I'm doing it because I believe in the RO system (even though the article casts a bit of a knock against the plastic membrane, which is unfortunate).