geem
Well-Known Member
Watermakers are safe to use in dirty water. Even where toilets are discharged. Oily water will damage the HP membrane so we are careful where we use the watermaker. The UV filter adds an extra layer of protection to our water before it enters the water tank. UV filtration and RO watermaking go well together. UV doesnt work well unless the water is super clean. Bacteria can hide behind particles in water and not get the UV zap due to shadow effect.I guess most people would not choose to use sea water in 'a busy anchorage'? There are many cautions about using water makers in those same anchorages, perhaps more biocide use is called for in those conditions?
The only problem running the watermaker in dirty water is sediment contaminating the watermaker prefilters quickly. Its more important to keep prefilters clean on 12v watermakers than on 220v units like mine. We have a powerful 220v feed pump that can take a lot of pressure build up from dirty filters. This isn't the case on 12v feed pumps. They soon struggle with any pressure build up and then you starve the HP pump. This isn't good for the 12v HP pumps.
You should be able to make water in a busy anchorage since this is where you spend a lot of time. If you are going for a 12v watermaker the run time will be measured in hours per day. Where else are you going to make water? We average 15-20mins use per day but choose normally to run the watermaker every other day for about 30-40 mins. Once you get to three days of none use you risk bacterial contamination of the system simply due to dying plankton in the pre filters and pipework. The system gets smelly and your TDS readings increase. This is less of a problem in cool water.
Good luck with your installation ?