Micro Bubble Scrubbing

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Thanks for the vid..
Im having an issue with low Ph too...
Which is why I am thinking about trying this..

Have you tried the usual methods of aeration with outside air?
 

W@tchm@n

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Have you tried the usual methods of aeration with outside air?
This is actually my issue....
Winter..

My tank is basically in a dungeon.. No windows at all and kind of 'underground'.
In the summer I can leave the upstairs doors open and I get a flow of air down there.... But now its all closed up my pH has dropped to around 7.7 according to salifert... My corals aren't opening as much and I've got pretty brown sand...
All my other parameters are good.... As checked out by other members on the forum.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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This is actually my issue....
Winter..

My tank is basically in a dungeon.. No windows at all and kind of 'underground'.
In the summer I can leave the upstairs doors open and I get a flow of air down there.... But now its all closed up my pH has dropped to around 7.7 according to salifert... My corals aren't opening as much and I've got pretty brown sand...
All my other parameters are good.... As checked out by other members on the forum.

Either way you are going to have to use outside air if you want a pH boost (and don't want to use a CO2 scrubber). An airline through a hole to outside is the likely way with either the skimmer method (airline attaches to skimmer inlet) or the "bubbles in tank" method described in this thread. :)
 

ca1ore

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Either way you are going to have to use outside air if you want a pH boost (and don't want to use a CO2 scrubber). An airline through a hole to outside is the likely way with either the skimmer method (airline attaches to skimmer inlet) or the "bubbles in tank" method described in this thread. :)

If one were going to do the scrubbing bubbles to try to raise pH, surely the source air would need to come from outside also - Winter or not, going to have to pull in cold air.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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If one were going to do the scrubbing bubbles to try to raise pH, surely the source air would need to come from outside also - Winter or not, going to have to pull in cold air.

Almost certainly. Using inside air it may actually lower pH, especially during the daytime high.
 

ca1ore

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I'd say you don't have experience in water chemistry nor water processing.

But I'd put you in that category.

More insults, I wonder if you'd have said that to my face LOL. I find your explanations increasingly desperate and, frankly, foolish. 'Re-ionization of seawater' ..... really, really ..... technobabble. I think others beyond myself have pointed out the absurdity of what you are saying. Enough said on this topic. Suggest you refrain from personal insults mate.
 

W@tchm@n

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Either way you are going to have to use outside air if you want a pH boost (and don't want to use a CO2 scrubber). An airline through a hole to outside is the likely way with either the skimmer method (airline attaches to skimmer inlet) or the "bubbles in tank" method described in this thread. :)
So with a scrubber...
I don't need to run the line from outside... Or am I reading that wrong?

I don't think I can run a line outside..
Abit complicated to explain the setup of building and the room.
 

Scott Campbell

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So with a scrubber...
I don't need to run the line from outside... Or am I reading that wrong?

I don't think I can run a line outside..
Abit complicated to explain the setup of building and the room.

With a CO2 scrubber you would not necessarily need to use outside air. The scrubber will remove the CO2. But the media can become expensive to use over the long haul and the higher the levels of CO2 in the air you are using, the faster the media will become exhausted. If you go that route - buy the media from a medical supply house in a big bucket. That is the most cost effective way.
 

W@tchm@n

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With a CO2 scrubber you would not necessarily need to use outside air. The scrubber will remove the CO2. But the media can become expensive to use over the long haul and the higher the levels of CO2 in the air you are using, the faster the media will become exhausted. If you go that route - buy the media from a medical supply house in a big bucket. That is the most cost effective way.
Thanks...
Will look into it...
 

Cruz_Arias

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Yes. No issue with anemones.

They'll benefit with better oxygenation and removal of waste.
 

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