Reef nutrition

Problems with Aquatic Life Booster Pump/RO Buddie

Hi everyone,

I’m having an issue with my RO system and I’m trying to understand what’s going on.

Setup
  • RO unit: Aquatic Life RO Buddie 100 GPD
  • Booster pump: Smart Buddie 50–100 GPD (Model 660718)
  • Purchase date: March 3, 2026
  • Membrane: brand new, installed March 8, 2026 (same day system started), and flushed for a few hours after installation

Water parameters
  • Tap water TDS: ~243–254 ppm
  • RO reservoir TDS: initially ~17 ppm, now rising to ~19–20 ppm

Pressure
  • Incoming pressure: ~30–35 psi
  • With booster: pressure initially was around 60–65 psi, but over time has increased and now rises to 100–105 psi before the membrane

Performance measurements
With booster pump:
  • 16 oz filtered water → 1 min 12 sec
  • 16 oz waste water → 4 min 47 sec
This gives roughly:
4:1 product:waste ratio

Measured TDS directly from RO (after flushing ~15 min): 25 ppm

Without booster pump:
  • Very slow filtered water (dripping)
  • Waste water flows much faster
  • RO TDS: ~134 ppm

What I've done so far
  • Followed all Smart Buddie instructions:
    • Correct tubing configuration
    • Removed original flow restrictor (as instructed)
    • No check valve used
    • Timer installed (using float valve)
  • Reinstalled original flow restrictor, no meaningful change
  • Tested with different tubing/containers → same results
  • Let system run and stabilize before measuring
  • Confirmed the membrane is properly seated
  • Checked all connections, no kinked or obstructed tubing

Observations
  • System produces too much product and too little waste
  • TDS is higher than expected for a new membrane
  • Pressure increases significantly with booster (~105 psi)
  • Reservoir TDS slowly increases over time

My current understanding
It seems like:
  • The system is under-restricting the waste line
  • Water is passing too easily to the product side
  • The membrane is not getting proper contact time
  • The booster may be overdriving the system under these conditions

Main question
Why would the system show:
  • high pressure (~105 psi)
  • but still behave like it is under-restricted (high product, low waste, high TDS)?
Also:
  • Could the Smart Buddie’s internal restrictor be insufficient or malfunctioning?
  • Or is this expected behavior under high pressure?

Any insight would be appreciated.
 
RO buddie uses a 95? iirc? percent rejection rate membrane so you should expect 10-15 ppm in product anyway. You need DI to remove a lot of little molecules, nitrate, phosphate, silica, dissolved gases that pass thru. Regardless 25 seems a bit much

1:4 product to waste isn’t great but it seems around normal

105psi also seems a little much but I’m not too well versed on plumbing.

Can you measure tds and waste water ratio without the booster pump?

Maybe a low quality membrane? Try replacing it?
 
RO buddie uses a 95? iirc? percent rejection rate membrane so you should expect 10-15 ppm in product anyway. You need DI to remove a lot of little molecules, nitrate, phosphate, silica, dissolved gases that pass thru. Regardless 25 seems a bit much

1:4 product to waste isn’t great but it seems around normal

105psi also seems a little much but I’m not too well versed on plumbing.

Can you measure tds and waste water ratio without the booster pump?

Maybe a low quality membrane? Try replacing it?
The rejection rate I should be getting is 96-98%.

My ratio is 4:1, no 1:4. I’m producing 4 times the product than waste.

When I remove the booster pump I only get a few drops at a time in the product line, with a tds of 134. I didn’t calculate the product-waste ratio but based on what I saw it was easily 1:10 (p-w) if not worse.

Maybe the membrane is malfunctioning (idk, is my first RO system), I used the one that came with the filter, it was new at the time of the install.
 
Can you share a few pictures of how you have it hooked up. Just to make sure everything is connected correctly?

I think that's a super simple one to hook up. Yet couldn't hurt to have others look over how you have it installed.

4 times product verse waste is what makes me wonder if something is hooked up backwards or something.
 
Can you share a few pictures of how you have it hooked up. Just to make sure everything is connected correctly?

I think that's a super simple one to hook up. Yet couldn't hurt to have others look over how you have it installed.

4 times product verse waste is what makes me wonder if something is hooked up backwards or something.
I tried uploading the image directly, but even after compressing it to 300 KB, the upload still said the file was too large. I uploaded the images to my Google Drive instead.

 
I tried uploading the image directly, but even after compressing it to 300 KB, the upload still said the file was too large. I uploaded the images to my Google Drive instead.

I fixed it for you.
IMG_4854.png
IMG_4853.png
 
Can you remove and then reinstall the membrane back in? And if that doesn’t work maybe the membrane is damaged.

Is that the sediment block? It’s that dirty, and you bought this thing this month?
 
I’m not familiar with either units. But what I can tell you is you have a choke on the waste side somewhere. Just disconnect each join until it flows like crazy. Or your membrane is bad. Even if it’s new. It can be bad if it’s a cheap one.
 
Can you remove and then reinstall the membrane back in? And if that doesn’t work maybe the membrane is damaged.

Is that the sediment block? It’s that dirty, and you bought this thing this month?

Can you remove and then reinstall the membrane back in? And if that doesn’t work maybe the membrane is damaged.

Is that the sediment block? It’s that dirty, and you bought this thing this month?

I already removed and reinstalled the membrane two or three times when I thought that was the problem.

Yeah that's the sediment filter, the water in my house is dirty.
 
I’m not familiar with either units. But what I can tell you is you have a choke on the waste side somewhere. Just disconnect each join until it flows like crazy. Or your membrane is bad. Even if it’s new. It can be bad if it’s a cheap one.
I’m going to try not using the wastewater management feature on the booster pump and adding back the original flow restrictor. I don’t know if the unit will work without all the tubings being connected, but it doesn’t hurt to try.
 
Re thinking it. I think the booster pump is doing its job. Pressure is high because there’s a choke in your system after the booster pump. Ro/di systems don’t work well at 35 psi. They will work tho. 60 psi is the sweet spot. Since you have a pressure gauge. Tap that gauge before and after each stage. When you see the back up. That’s the bad unit. Also. If there’s a restrictor valve at the waste water dump. It might be the wrong one because now you added a booster pump and it’s choking it.
 
Btw. The gauge itself can be a choke point. I’m lazy. What I would do is remove the membrane and move the gauge to the end and see if it is still backed up. Before I look at each unit. Then remove the gauge and see how the flow is.
 
Re thinking it. I think the booster pump is doing its job. Pressure is high because there’s a choke in your system after the booster pump. Ro/di systems don’t work well at 35 psi. They will work tho. 60 psi is the sweet spot. Since you have a pressure gauge. Tap that gauge before and after each stage. When you see the back up. That’s the bad unit. Also. If there’s a restrictor valve at the waste water dump. It might be the wrong one because now you added a booster pump and it’s choking it.

I will keep using the booster pump. It has a waste water inlet port and an outlet port. That part is supposed to flush the membrane before each use, and it also includes the external flow restrictor there. I will not use that part of the booster pump. I will reinstall the flow restrictor that came with the filter to see how it behaves. If that does not work, the problem might be the membrane
 
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