I've been running my CA reactor T'd off my main return, with the effluent controlled at the output of the reactor for a bit over a year. It had the common problem of after a few weeks, algae & crud causing the effluent to slow, so I'd clean it out and go again.
Recently I tried controlling the drip through the INPUT side of the reactor. I put a ball-valve on the T junction off my main return and control the drip that way. In theory this should be great because it removes most all pressure from the CA reactor (which I was concerned with when I was controlling the drip at the output), but the adjustment is way too sensitive and unreliable.
In reading, the optimal solution would be a continuous duty peristaltic pump, but at several hundred dollars for a USED one, I don't think I'm going to go that route (and the BRS pumps are not continuous duty, I checked).
At this point I have a couple of options. I think I'm going to try and control the drip at both the INPUT and the OUTPUT, dialing back the input to avoid excess pressure and then doing the fine adjustment at the OUTPUT. However, I had another thought...
Has anyone ever used a Tom's Aquatics Aqua-Lifter to supply a CA reactor?
They're cheap enough that they can be replaced every 6 months or year if needed, and they are slow enough that they shouldn't create a ton of pressure.
My only concerns are in running it 24x7...
Any advice would be great.
Cheers.
-Jeff
Recently I tried controlling the drip through the INPUT side of the reactor. I put a ball-valve on the T junction off my main return and control the drip that way. In theory this should be great because it removes most all pressure from the CA reactor (which I was concerned with when I was controlling the drip at the output), but the adjustment is way too sensitive and unreliable.
In reading, the optimal solution would be a continuous duty peristaltic pump, but at several hundred dollars for a USED one, I don't think I'm going to go that route (and the BRS pumps are not continuous duty, I checked).
At this point I have a couple of options. I think I'm going to try and control the drip at both the INPUT and the OUTPUT, dialing back the input to avoid excess pressure and then doing the fine adjustment at the OUTPUT. However, I had another thought...
Has anyone ever used a Tom's Aquatics Aqua-Lifter to supply a CA reactor?
They're cheap enough that they can be replaced every 6 months or year if needed, and they are slow enough that they shouldn't create a ton of pressure.
My only concerns are in running it 24x7...
Any advice would be great.
Cheers.
-Jeff