Really great information! I’d (and have) include a reverse osmosis system in the kitchen for drinking water. Oh wait! I see now that you did! I’m upgrading your video to STELLAR!
Carbon filters will typically clog very quickly if you are on well water. For wells you should have two filters: a sediment filter (5 micron) and then rhe carbon filter. Otherwise you might be replacing pricey carbon filters every week or two.
That pex really needs a manifold rather than that built-up system. For the number of fittings you are using it might even be cheaper. Also, having a separate pump and pressure tank for the RO reject water to use for either toilet flush or irrigation helps to reduce the waste significantly.
@@pintaco4299 Not really. For the average house, for every gallon of water you drink you flush the toilet 3-4 times, using 3.5-5 gallons. Even with an RO system that is 50% efficient toilet flushing alone is enough to use the waste water. If you use RO water for showering (which is stupid) the math would change. Realistically though, a 10 gallon holding tank is plenty for this application.