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#1
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![]() Anyone ever have an issue with air getting into the reactor somehow?
I have had this reactor for a while and have battled this issue ever since i bought it. Every night or every second night i have to try and get rid of the bubbles and if i let it accumulate, it slows down my effluent drip rate. I thought i might have been getting micro bubbles from my sump but i even tried putting the pump into a filter sock to prevent any bubbles going through, and i still get the bubbles. any idea? its a precision marine 622 reactor fed by a maxijet. |
#2
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![]() Sounds to me like C02 accumulating in the reactor... not a bad thing as that is what lowers Ph to dissolve the media... U may need to slow the gas bubble rate or increase the water flow through the reactor depending on your effluent water pH and the calcium and alkalinity levels in your tank ... My personal experience with running a calcium reactor is I always had to set the drip rate of effluent water a bit higher than I wanted it to end up as it seem to slow down over the next day or two
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#3
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![]() Quote:
I'm thinking now one of the fittings must be letting in some air. I'm going to replace the uniseal on the reactor and see if that helps any. |
#4
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![]() Any micro bubbles getting into your feed pump? That happened to me recently.
I would check all your connections for sure. Are you running it externally?
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![]() They call it addiction for a reason... |
#5
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![]() Quote:
All the fitting connections look good and all have silicone around them as well or extra protection. The only thing I can think of is the uniseal which I will try to replace today or tomorrow. |
#6
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![]() What kind of reactor media are you using? Do you have a CO2 recirc line?
I'm fairly certain it's a CO2 buildup. The reactor I use right now doesn't have a recirc line and it's prone to this issue as well (I'm tempted to retro one in at some point "when I have some free time" giggle giggle! ... <sigh> but I digress). Even reactors I've had with a recirc line were eventually prone to this issue. Especially with the older style finer-grained ARM media it would eventually soften enough that the flow through the media would be too resistive and the CO2 would build up. That was always the cue for me to replace my media and it was one of the reasons I actually stopped using a reactor at all for a few years and went to 2-part dosing. The only thing is I don't really like 2 part dosing, the results of coral growth are just better overall with a reactor, at least for me. So here I am back to CO2 and reactors. ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
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