- Joined
- Oct 9, 2019
- Messages
- 291
- Reaction score
- 113
I've been struggling with my dosing pumps on my nano tank because I need to dose only a slight amount (for example 2ml a day). Been using silicone tubing for a long time but I always had air building up in the lines and not enough fluid to clear out the bubbles so they would build up over time. Can build up enough in 24h to cause issues with dosing. Tried the smallest version of silicone tubing (1mm ID) that I could find (which helped with clearing the lines more often) but still had air in the lines, even after glueing all the connections to make sure that air cannot enter the lines through one of those.
So I made up a test where I had silicone tube dosing AllForReef, silicone tube with RO water (baseline) and a wider PVC dosing tube that I had also dosing AllForReef. My findings:
Conclusion: Microbubbles are a result of a reaction between AllForReef and the silicone tube? Which I guess can happen but why isn't this a known thing? Aren't most people using silicone tubing on their dosing pumps?
So I made up a test where I had silicone tube dosing AllForReef, silicone tube with RO water (baseline) and a wider PVC dosing tube that I had also dosing AllForReef. My findings:
- The silicone dosing tube with AllForReef: Had microbubbles in the silicone tube which where building up over 24h causing air pockets in the tube. Failing the test.
- The silicone dosing tube with RO: Only had a few (3-4) microbubbles in the tube which did not cause any issues with dosing. So it did pass the test.
- The PVC dosing tube with AllForReef: Only a few microbubbles which also did not cause any issues with dosing. To my surprise, this one passed as well.
Conclusion: Microbubbles are a result of a reaction between AllForReef and the silicone tube? Which I guess can happen but why isn't this a known thing? Aren't most people using silicone tubing on their dosing pumps?