I tried searching to see if anyone posted about the pros and cons of standard versus recirculating and didn’t see any results.
I’ve been trying to boost my pH as Im interested in growing stony corals. It seems that faster growth of corals (likely related to easier precipitation of calcium carbonate) is the only reason to boost pH ( I suppose if one has clams this may apply also but I don’t have any interest and can’t say I’ve looked into it). Unless someone’s pH is 7.5 or under boosting pH has no effect on fish.
In my opinion recirculating scrubbers cause more trouble than they solve unless you have a lot of failsafes (solenoids, float switch to turn off skimmer if it overflows or just draining the draining the skimmer externally)
They seem to work in a closed loop so you’re basically lowering the CO2 and then sealing off the skimmer and thereby a huge chunk of air exchange so that you’re wholy dependent on surface air exchange for other gases (mainly O2, but I suppose if you have other gases such as H2S from anaerobic metabolism then off gassing is limited, though this is probably not a very common scenario)
It seems the main benefit is lower usage of media which can be quite cost saving. Some people report huge pH boosts though that seems inconsistent.
Standard CO2 scrubbing still gets the majority of the results in that a you still get a large pH boost without the potential for nuking your tank if you have an overflow of skimmate into your line. The most common problem is inefficient scrubbing if the airflow is too dry. running the intake tubing into a water filled jar seems to humidify the air adequately (example below)
My pH went from around 7.9 on average pre scrubber to 8.1 with a scrubber. Surprisingly when I tried to recirculate I did not get any additional pH boost. Using sodium hydroxide as my alk source has given me an additional boost of 0.05, while not huge is still a decent boost with really not additional effort.
IMO for most people going from non recirculating to recirculating has a decent chance for a catastrophic failure while only providing a modest pH boost though it does save quite some money on media. You also lose a lot of oxygenation and if you have a high fish load that can be potentially catastrophic as well
Curious what others think
I’ve been trying to boost my pH as Im interested in growing stony corals. It seems that faster growth of corals (likely related to easier precipitation of calcium carbonate) is the only reason to boost pH ( I suppose if one has clams this may apply also but I don’t have any interest and can’t say I’ve looked into it). Unless someone’s pH is 7.5 or under boosting pH has no effect on fish.
In my opinion recirculating scrubbers cause more trouble than they solve unless you have a lot of failsafes (solenoids, float switch to turn off skimmer if it overflows or just draining the draining the skimmer externally)
They seem to work in a closed loop so you’re basically lowering the CO2 and then sealing off the skimmer and thereby a huge chunk of air exchange so that you’re wholy dependent on surface air exchange for other gases (mainly O2, but I suppose if you have other gases such as H2S from anaerobic metabolism then off gassing is limited, though this is probably not a very common scenario)
It seems the main benefit is lower usage of media which can be quite cost saving. Some people report huge pH boosts though that seems inconsistent.
Standard CO2 scrubbing still gets the majority of the results in that a you still get a large pH boost without the potential for nuking your tank if you have an overflow of skimmate into your line. The most common problem is inefficient scrubbing if the airflow is too dry. running the intake tubing into a water filled jar seems to humidify the air adequately (example below)
My pH went from around 7.9 on average pre scrubber to 8.1 with a scrubber. Surprisingly when I tried to recirculate I did not get any additional pH boost. Using sodium hydroxide as my alk source has given me an additional boost of 0.05, while not huge is still a decent boost with really not additional effort.
IMO for most people going from non recirculating to recirculating has a decent chance for a catastrophic failure while only providing a modest pH boost though it does save quite some money on media. You also lose a lot of oxygenation and if you have a high fish load that can be potentially catastrophic as well
Curious what others think