ok... so i bought Jeremy's reactor and I'm trying to figure out more how these things work and I'm a bit confused by what I'm reading... i've been reading up at this page on melev's site:
http://www.melevsreef.com/calcium_reactor.html
-According to his page, the CO2 lowers the PH and causes the media to dissolve(which is supposed to raise my alkalinity)... however, he mentions that what drips out of the reactor is at a PH of 6.5-6.9... my tank's PH is 8.2... if what it's putting out is lower on the PH scale, wouldn't this be lowering my alkalinity instead??? higher PH means higher alkalinity and lower PH means more acidic right???
Lowering the pH inside the reactor makes the water more acidic, dissolving the media. This leaves you with water that will have a lower pH entering the system, but it's also super alkaline, increasing the alkalinity of your tank. It will also add calcium and other trace elements such as Magnesium to your tank. Your tank will easily compensate for the pH entering the system unless you're adding too much CO2, then you'd need to decrease the CO2 into the reactor or decrease the drip rate coming from the reactor
-I'm more confused about what a PH probe is after reading his page... prior to reading it, i just thought a PH probe is something that displays what the PH is... now according to his page, it seems like it's something that reads PH and is hooked up to a PH controller. The PH controller then shuts off the solenoid, which shuts off the CO2. So a PH probe is a whole different device which includes a controller am i correct? Are PH probe systems universal or would i have to buy a brand specific one for my H&S unit??
A pH probe is simply the probe that goes into the top of the reactor, or you can also have one in the tank or sump to monitor the tank itself. The probe can be connected to either a monitor or a controller. A monitor will only tell you the pH of whatever you're measuring with the probe. A controller allows you to turn something on or off based on the settings you choose. For example, you can set the controller to turn on/off the CO2 regulator at certain levels. Another way to set it up would be to use an pH controller on the tank itself by placing the probe in the sump. If the pH of the tank drops beyond a certain level, you can have it turn off the regulator allowing the pH to come back up to normal levels before allowing the CO2 to come back on. You can buy any pH probe/monitor/controller.
-Does that aquariumplants.com regulator unit come with that solenoid thing mentioned in his page that stops flow from the CO2 tank in the event of outages?
The regulator does come with the solenoid
-This H&S unit has some sort of pump attached to it. This is the circulation pump right? Jeremy said I'll need to use another pump to feed water into it from my sump. How powerful of a pump would i need?? Also, what I find strange is that all this water is being pumped into it, and only small drips are being output back into the sump, wouldn't this be hurting the pump???
Yes, that is the circulation pump. You can use pretty much any pump, you don't need much. Restricting the flow output from a pump doesn't hurt it. NEVER reduce the input to a pump.
-The aquariumplants.com regulator unit is awfully expensive($189.99) and i see a lot of other cheaper units. What does this unit do that others don't??? I don't mind paying extra if the difference is worth it.
Do any form of research and you'll quickly see that the Aquarium Plants regulator is VERY highly regarded. The question is simple, do you want to buy 1 regulator, or buy several after getting frustrated with each as they have a hard time giving you a steady flow. I've used several other regulators and simply thrown 2 of them away. Buy the right one the first time and have one less thing to worry about.
Thanks Guys!