Dosing/Metering Pumps

Bryan

Active member
Hi Randy:

I assume you work in a multi million dollar laboratory. Any recommendations on mfg that make QUIET peristaltic/metering pumps.

Was looking around on Ebay and Cole Palmer Masterflex and Fluid Metering Inc pumps pop up quite often.

Looking something to feed a calcium reactor.

Thanks
 
I use a cole-palmer masterflex that I found on Ebay... "gently" used for around $85 with the head. It is not very quiet, but you can use it remotely (mine is about 50-75' away in the laundry room. It pumps kalk up to the sump on a float switch/relay to replenish evap. It is definitely one of the most reliable peristaltic pumpsas far as I have heard.
 
Thanks all. I also see on EBAY often is LMI industrial metering pumps. Used exclusively in industrial settings and very robust and expensive when new. But I suspect they are probably noisy.

I want to feed a calcium reactor so mounting remotely really isn't a viable option.
 
I don't know about the LMI, but the LMIII I have is very quiet. But don't think there good for a calcium reactor where you have a constant feed of water.
 
The Nautilus by innovative aquatics is much quieter than the litermeter III; I have both. I think it would work great as a calcium reactor feed, assuming you cannot just tee off your return line, install a John guest miniature ball valve, and use a "pinch" valve like they have on medical drippers on the output. The combination of the pressure line, ball valve on the way in, and the pinch valve really works.
 
Don't see how the Nautilus or any of the medical dosing pumps could be used as a feed for a calcium reactor. They top out at 300ml/h which translates to 5ml per min. The average effluent rate for a calcium reactor is somewhere between 30-100 ml/min
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9077769#post9077769 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jag1979
do not buy an aqua medic

I have the twin reefdoser and like it very much.

It's so quiet I have to look and make sure it's running at the time's I have it set for.

No complaints here.
 
I'm pretty sure the nautilus can dose 900 ml/hr with the higher flow tubing, although thinking about it maybe that's not enough for a calcium reactor; good call Bryan.
 
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