I just want to ask whether it’s very costly to change the filters and how often it needs to be done (approximately), because I’ve heard a couple of different versions.
The pre filters are cheap if you don't buy a system that uses the bespoke types.
They cost something like $3-4 a piece (there are usually 3 - two sediment and one carbon).
It is usually advised to change these every 6 months but it highly depends on the quality and amount of the water you send to it.
I feed my system good drinking water quality but it is very hard (350-450ppm) I use 3 gallons filtered water a day and I change the pre filters once a year.
In some cases you may want to change them every 3 months or add more pre filters if the input water is very poor.
This is done primarily to protect the RO membrane.
The RO membrane can usually be used for 3-5 years without problems if you remember to replace the prefilters as perscribed.
The 600GPD membranes I have used in the past cost around $150.
You can buy a cheap PPM meter and measure on occasions to see if all is OK. I replace every 5 years event if the quality is not degraded.
Post RO membrane filtering may be necessary if needed for consumption: Carbon filter and a mineral filter to reintroduce minerals into the water.
These things are not necessary for process water (and you definitely don't want to reintroduce minerals for photo usage).
If you require 0 ppm (you don't for photo processing) then you would add a resin filter after the RO membrane.
A last remark. RO water is RO water or 99% pure is 99% pure.
Everpure and BWT and others sell their solutions as if they do something magical. It is not.
In a commercial context where support is critical, it may make sense to use the branded supported solutions, but the many Korean and Chinese solutions with a lot of plastic and tubes works just as well - if you open one of the nice looking Everpure or BWT boxes you'll see much of the same inside.
If looking at a system you will want to see not only to see if it delivers the amount you need: 600 Gallons pr day is MAX 600 gallons in 24 hours - (if you need it to deliver 30 gallons in one hour, then 600GPD it is too small) but also how long the system needs to run continuously.
The motors that push the water through the system are usually not designed to run continuously. It may need a break after 15 minutes for example.
In other words, you need to be careful when you select the correct size of the system.