I have never had pH issues, usually between 8.1 and 8.3 as measured by the apex. After getting new windows it has been a bit closer to the lower end, so I recently changed my skimmer to use the CO2 absorption materials sold by BRS in hopes of getting closer to the 8.4.
I was resistant to the idea / costs until I saw the idea to make the gas recirculating (pulling the intake of the material from inside the skimmer collection lid).
This worked better than expected, too good in fact! At night the pH wont drop at all, it stays completely flat. And then during the day the pH would climb as normal. Once I was easily hitting 8.5 I knew I needed to re-think this.
I plan to use a solenoid with the apex to enable fresh air intake into the simmer and see if I can achieve a mostly flat 8.4 pH. However until that's done I have been manually disconnecting the material to keep the pH from climbing too high. I notice that my pH falls way faster than ever before, and falls lower than it used to without the help of the material.
Which brings me to my questions...
What chemically is happening in this material, is it just an absorption of the carbon to instead leave o2 post reaction?
Any way to rationalize why a tank might become dependent on this, and otherwise loose even more pH without it?
I worry there is some reaction going on with my alk or something else I am not understanding. I am trying to decide if I should just abandon the idea, or if I should move forward with the solenoid to control the pH.
Thanks everyone!
I was resistant to the idea / costs until I saw the idea to make the gas recirculating (pulling the intake of the material from inside the skimmer collection lid).
This worked better than expected, too good in fact! At night the pH wont drop at all, it stays completely flat. And then during the day the pH would climb as normal. Once I was easily hitting 8.5 I knew I needed to re-think this.
I plan to use a solenoid with the apex to enable fresh air intake into the simmer and see if I can achieve a mostly flat 8.4 pH. However until that's done I have been manually disconnecting the material to keep the pH from climbing too high. I notice that my pH falls way faster than ever before, and falls lower than it used to without the help of the material.
Which brings me to my questions...
What chemically is happening in this material, is it just an absorption of the carbon to instead leave o2 post reaction?
Any way to rationalize why a tank might become dependent on this, and otherwise loose even more pH without it?
I worry there is some reaction going on with my alk or something else I am not understanding. I am trying to decide if I should just abandon the idea, or if I should move forward with the solenoid to control the pH.
Thanks everyone!


