Over 50ppm TDS is very bad for a RO System. We usually target a max of 20-30 microsiemens.
Check 3 things:
- The input water pressure must be at least 40psi, preferably higher. Below that, it does not work.
- If the membrane is well secured inside its cartridge. Sometimes there are leaks.
- How much water is rejected. Depending on the membrane models, the ratio RO water/rejected water will vary. High performance membranes that are expensive can be set up to 1 part of rejected water to 20 of RO pure water, but most cheap household ones will work on a 1:3 ratio. If you block too much water from being rejected, then the EC of the RO water will sharply increase.
RO Membranes do not filter physically all the ions and molecules. A part of the larger molecules cannot pass through the semipermeable membrane, but the ions are repelled from the membrane. If the water pressure is too low, the repelling effect will not happen, and the ions go through. Basically it removes many molecules, and it repels most ions, if the pressure is right. At low pressure, the electrostatic and flush effects won't happen, and they can pass through the membrane.
That's why too boron is a huge problem. The molecules of boric acid are small enough to pass through the membrane, and as boric acid does not dissociate readily, most RO systems will not filter boron. In high boron areas, it can be deadly to the plants.
One last note, if the EC of the imput water is 600 microsiemens as an example, and the RO water is by accident at 200 microsiemens, which would be very bad. it does not mean that there is 1/3 of the calcium or minerals of the input water. Some ions are repelled more easily than others, and a high EC output RO water might well be loaded with most of the input sodium, the calcium having been rejected as a priority in a poorly working setup, as an example.