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good day, i bought a GEO REACTOR NR Sulfur now i need to convert GEO NR818 Sulfur REACTOR to GEO CR818 CALCIUM REACTOR, can someone please help me
thank you
I think most if not all Ca reactors put in the CO2 right before the pump. However, at or near maximal capacity, a lot of the Ca reactors have problem with dissolving CO2. In this situation my modification will increase the ability of the calcium reactor to dissolves CO2, thus decrease the pH of the chamber and will be able to put out more Ca CO3 than the same Ca reactor without modification.Why not just have the CO2 enter prior to the pump so the impeller breaks the bubbles up much like a protein skimmer?
On LifeReef reactors that is how they are set up and I think bubbles collect minimally in the reactor chamber. Video Link Below
YouTube LifeReef Reactor MasiniReef
Yes this would indeed be bad for the water lines! This is the CO2 input line.You cannot run the water intake though this flow restrictor. I recommended run the water input through the bubble counter and add another bubble counter at the regulator.
Interesting. In Schuran reactors, the efluent is drawn far below the top of the chamber, so CO2 can be recirculated.
The point of not drawing the efluent from the top of the lid is that the co2 / co2 rich water at the top of the lid can be recirculated to the bottom of the reactor instead of going out the efluent line.Effluent on this small Geo is pulled from the top in the lid. Other models might be slightly different? I have it going into the bottom of a secondary chamber and then out the top of the secondary back to the tank. I don't see any gas bubble on the inside surface of the lid so that's good. I would guess it's recirculating quite a bit as I am only pulling 26ml/min (.42gal/hr) out the secondary chamber and the sicce syncra .5 can move 185gal/hr.
Yep I understand what you are saying. Maybe will become an issue if I was pushing a lot more CO2 or pulling a large portion of effluent?? I am guessing with the size of the chamber and the fairly low flow out the effluent line in relation to how much water the ciculation pump can move that it's fairly homogeneous throughout. The report by BRS on secondary chambers' effect on effluent pH and alkalinity seemed pretty convincing and not all that hard to implement.The point of not drawing the efluent from the top of the lid is that the co2 / co2 rich water at the top of the lid can be recirculated to the bottom of the reactor instead of going out the efluent line.
If the tiny gas bubbles never make it to the top (which is hard to imagine for me), then there is no concern.
Hi, i came here to post the exact same thing.Its an interesting idea to use the flow restrictor capillary for getting smaller CO2 bubbles.
I had a similar idea of installing an Inline CO2 Atomizer which they use in freshwater planted tanks. These are installed in the return pipe of the canister filter, to dissolve the supplied CO2. It is a small ceramic disc which breaks the gas into smallest possible bubbles. Something like this (there are many similar devices made by different manufacturers). I think this can be installed in the circulation loop of the calcium reactor to dissolve all the CO2 efficiently.
My method is really easy. You don’t really need to atomized it since the flow will take the CO2 right to the intake of the circulation pump. It take me less than a min or two once I assemble the correct parts to install this modification. It does not cost very much either.Hi, i came here to post the exact same thing.
If you want fine CO2 bubbles, this is the best way to go indeed.
It would require more work/butchering the reactor to install this though...
From time to time my pump will stop recirculating due to the amount of gas in the chamber.