Brian Prestwood
Premium Member
Ron
I've never figured out what makes water back up into the CO2 line. It only takes about 10ml of water fill the CO2 line all way to the expensive stuff.
EDIT: FWIW I normally find about 30 ml sitting in mine within a couple of days of draining it. It tends to just sit there for weeks.
A dripper flow restrictor (needle valve or drip system dripper) on the exit side of the reactor chamber means the reactor chamber is pressurized to whatever pressure the reactor chamber input pump delivers. On several occasions when I was using a dripper flow restrictor like this my resevoire just started slowly filling over several days.
There is nothing magic about resevoires. If they fill the water will back up into the expensive stuff. I've been using mine for about a year now. In that time I've seen it fill almost completely once.
I've never figured out what makes water back up into the CO2 line. It only takes about 10ml of water fill the CO2 line all way to the expensive stuff.
EDIT: FWIW I normally find about 30 ml sitting in mine within a couple of days of draining it. It tends to just sit there for weeks.
A dripper flow restrictor (needle valve or drip system dripper) on the exit side of the reactor chamber means the reactor chamber is pressurized to whatever pressure the reactor chamber input pump delivers. On several occasions when I was using a dripper flow restrictor like this my resevoire just started slowly filling over several days.
There is nothing magic about resevoires. If they fill the water will back up into the expensive stuff. I've been using mine for about a year now. In that time I've seen it fill almost completely once.
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