mr&mrsfish
New member
About nine months ago, I made the switch from ten years of calcium reactors and kalk reactors to all two part. For those of us with newer homes and high indoor CO2, calcium reactors just don't work well. The pH is always extremely low and you have to run high alkalinity to make up for it.
I'm seeing better growth and coloration since the switch. My pH is on average 0.3 higher at slightly lower alkalinity.
Regarding the whole cost issue, I certainly agree dosing is more expensive on larger systems especially if high quality pumps are used. I will spend about $200 per year on chemicals whereas I used to spend ~$100 per year on CaCO3 and CO2. Is the additional $100 per year significant in the grand scheme of things? For reference, I spend annually > $2,000 on electricity, $400 on bulbs, $400 on salt, etc. I'm not sure the cost difference would be a significant part of any reefers budget including large systems like mine.
I agree the CaCO3 supplied by reactor media is more "natural" and provides all the necessary elements in the correct proportions. However, how many of us insist on purchasing actual saltwater instead of the synthetic salts produced from some of the same chemicals used in 2-part? I just complete water changes to re-establish the trace elements missing from the 2-part. These are the same trace elements that were put there originally by my "un-natural" synthetic sea salt :thumbsup:.
I'm seeing better growth and coloration since the switch. My pH is on average 0.3 higher at slightly lower alkalinity.
Regarding the whole cost issue, I certainly agree dosing is more expensive on larger systems especially if high quality pumps are used. I will spend about $200 per year on chemicals whereas I used to spend ~$100 per year on CaCO3 and CO2. Is the additional $100 per year significant in the grand scheme of things? For reference, I spend annually > $2,000 on electricity, $400 on bulbs, $400 on salt, etc. I'm not sure the cost difference would be a significant part of any reefers budget including large systems like mine.
I agree the CaCO3 supplied by reactor media is more "natural" and provides all the necessary elements in the correct proportions. However, how many of us insist on purchasing actual saltwater instead of the synthetic salts produced from some of the same chemicals used in 2-part? I just complete water changes to re-establish the trace elements missing from the 2-part. These are the same trace elements that were put there originally by my "un-natural" synthetic sea salt :thumbsup:.
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